Order:
  1.  83
    Science in the Pub: Artisan Botanists in Early Nineteenth-Century Lancashire.Anne Secord - 1994 - History of Science 32 (3):269-315.
  2.  16
    Botany on a Plate.Anne Secord - 2002 - Isis 93 (1):28-57.
  3.  31
    “Be what you would seem to be”: Samuel Smiles, Thomas Edward, and the Making of a Working-Class Scientific Hero.Anne Secord - 2003 - Science in Context 16 (1-2):147-173.
    ArgumentThis paper examines the effort that was involved in sustaining the nineteenth-century middle-class ideological fabrication of the image of the working-class scientific autodidact. The construction and reception of Samuel Smiles’ biography of the Scottish cobbler and naturalist Thomas Edward provides a way to investigate this process in detail and to show how Smiles’ conception of the scientific persona related to the “politics of character” in mid-Victorian Britain. Edward’s own response to the biography offers an unusual opportunity to analyze the making (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  4. Coming to attention : a commonwealth of observers during the Napoleonic Wars.Anne Secord - 2011 - In Lorraine Daston & Elizabeth Lunbeck (eds.), Histories of scientific observation. London: University of Chicago Press.
    No categories
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  5.  16
    Jenny Uglow. Nature's Engraver: A Life of Thomas Bewick. xix + 458 pp., figs., illus., index. London: Faber & Faber, 2006. £20. [REVIEW]Anne Secord - 2008 - Isis 99 (1):191-192.
  6.  22
    Michael Shortland , Hugh Miller's Memoir: From Stonemason to Geologist. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1995. Pp. v + 266. ISBN 0-7486-0521-5. £12.95. [REVIEW]Anne Secord - 1996 - British Journal for the History of Science 29 (1):105-106.
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark