We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode Scientists Cooperate while Humanists Ruminate (EF, JP)

Scientists Cooperate while Humanists Ruminate (EF, JP)

2025/4/17
logo of podcast New Books in Higher Education

New Books in Higher Education

Shownotes Transcript

Back in 2021, John and Elizabeth sat down with Brandeis string theorist Albion Lawrence) to discuss cooperation versus solitary study across disciplines. They sink their teeth into the question, “Why do scientists seem to do collaboration and teamwork better than other kinds of scholars and academics?”

The conversation ranges from the merits of collective biography to the influence of place and geographic location in scientific collaboration to mountaineering traditions in the sciences. As a Recallable Book, Elizabeth champions *The People of Puerto Rico, *an experiment in ethnography of a nation (in this case under colonial rule) from 1956, including a chapter by Robert Manners, founding chair of the Brandeis Department of Anthropology. Albion sings the praises of a collective biography of the Art Ensemble of Chicago, A Message to Our Folks. But John stays true to his Victorianist roots by praising the contrasting images of the withered humanist Casaubon and the dashing young scientist Lydgate in George Eliot’s own take on collective biography, Middlemarch.

Discussed in this episode:

Listen to and Read) the episode here.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices)