HSCI 240(F) Technology and Science in American Culture (Same as History 295)
Although technologically dependent, the American colonies slowly built a network of native scientists and inventors whose skills helped shape the United States' response to the
Industrial Revolution. The interaction of science, technology, and society in the nineteenth
century did much to form American identity: the machine in the garden, through the
"American System of Manufactures" helped America rise to technological prominence; the
professionalization and specialization of science and engineering led to their becoming vital
national resources. Understanding these developments, as well as the heroic age of
American invention (1865-1914), forms the focus of this course: how science and
technology have helped shape modern American life.
Format: seminar. Requirements: class discussion, six short reports (2-3 pages), and two hour
exams.
Enrollment limit: 15. Open to first-year students.
Satisfies one semester of the Division II requirement.
Hour: D. BEAVER