Recently, Petter Hellström successfully defended his doctoral thesis:
Trees of Knowledge: Science and the Shape of GenealogyThe thesis itself is obviously of great interest to readers of this blog. It is not currently online, but you can obtain a printed or electronic copy by contacting:
Department of the History of Science and Ideas
Uppsala University, Sweden
Here is the abstract:
This study investigates early employments of family trees in the modern sciences, in order to historicise their iconic status and now established uses, notably in evolutionary biology and linguistics. Moving beyond disciplinary accounts to consider the wider cultural background, it examines how early uses within the sciences transformed family trees as a format of visual representation, as well as the meanings invested in them.
Historical writing about trees in the modern sciences is heavily tilted towards evolutionary biology, especially the iconic diagrams associated with Darwinism. Trees of Knowledge shifts the focus to France in the wake of the Revolution, when family trees were first put to use in a number of disparate academic fields. Through three case studies drawn from across the disciplines, it investigates the simultaneous appearance of trees in natural history, language studies, and music theory. Augustin Augier’s tree of plant families, Félix Gallet’s family tree of dead and living languages, and Henri Montan Berton’s family tree of chords served diverse ends, yet all exploited the familiar shape of genealogy.
While outlining how genealogical trees once constituted a more general resource in scholarly knowledge production — employed primarily as pedagogical tools — this study argues that family trees entered the modern sciences independently of the evolutionary theories they were later made to illustrate. The trees from post-revolutionary France occasionally charted development over time, yet more often they served to visualise organic hierarchy and perfect order. In bringing this neglected history to light, Trees of Knowledge provides not only a rich account of the rise of tree thinking in the modern sciences, but also a pragmatic methodology for approaching the dynamic interplay of metaphor, visual representation, and knowledge production in the history of science.The trees of Augier and Gallet have been covered in this blog, but that of Berton has not. I will discuss it in the next post.
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