Cameron Strang takes American scientific thought and discoveries
away from the learned societies, museums, and teaching halls of the
Northeast and puts the production of knowledge about the natural
world in the context of competing empires and an expanding republic
in the Gulf South. People often dismissed by starched
northeasterners as nonintellectuals--Indian sages, African slaves,
Spanish officials, Irishmen on the make, clearers of land and
drivers of men--were also scientific observers, gatherers,
organizers, and reporters. Skulls and stems, birds and bugs, rocks
and maps, tall tales and fertile hypotheses came from them. They
collected, described, and sent the objects that scientists gazed on
and interpreted in polite Philadelphia. They made knowledge.
Frontiers of Science offers a new framework for approaching
American intellectual history, one that transcends political and
cultural boundaries and reveals persistence across the colonial and
national eras. The pursuit of knowledge in the United States did
not cohere around democratic politics or the influence of liberty.
It was, as in other empires, divided by multiple loyalties and
identities, organized through contested hierarchies of ethnicity
and place, and reliant on violence. By discovering the lost
intellectual history of one region, Strang shows us how to recover
a continent for science.