An original and innovative contribution to the history of science in Franco's Spain.
This book delivers on the promise of a new direction in the study of science by focusing on the political influence of dictatorial ideology on scientific publishing. While restricting the scope of the study to the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), the objectives are broadened by analyzing the criteria applied by Franco's Spain to define both science and scientific authority. This study also examines how such criteria determined which social actors were able to participate in the production and validation of scientific and theoretical knowledge, in both practical and discursive terms. Contextualized by a scientific field shaped under dictatorship, epistemological questions are explored through a fragmentary analysis of specific sites and social actors, political discourses, and scientific publications within the spatiotemporal framework of Franco's Spain.
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