Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1047886
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory–Sarajevo–Moscow: An Unlikely Network in the Fight Against Lysenkoism in Yugoslavia
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory–Sarajevo–Moscow: An Unlikely Network in the Fight Against Lysenkoism in Yugoslavia // Annual Meeting of the History of Science Society
Utrecht, Nizozemska, 2019. str. 64-65 (predavanje, nije recenziran, sažetak, znanstveni)
CROSBI ID: 1047886 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory–Sarajevo–Moscow: An Unlikely Network in the Fight Against Lysenkoism in Yugoslavia
Autori
Duančić, Vedran
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, sažetak, znanstveni
Skup
Annual Meeting of the History of Science Society
Mjesto i datum
Utrecht, Nizozemska, 23.07.2019. - 27.07.2019
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Predavanje
Vrsta recenzije
Nije recenziran
Ključne riječi
Lisenkoism ; socialist Yugoslavia ; de-Stalinization ; science and politics ; Mirko Korić ; Milislav Demerec
Sažetak
Never officially enforced or renounced, Lysenkoism in socialist Yugoslavia was propagated since 1945 and lingered on well into the 1950s, even after the Tito-Stalin Split precipitated an early and dramatic de-Stalinization. In 1954, Mirko Korić (1894-1977), biology professor at the University of Sarajevo who was forced to retire after students rebelled against his lectures in “formal genetics, ” published a book, Istina o T. D. Lisenku i njegovom učenju (The truth about T. D. Lysenko and his teachings). By far the most sophisticated and comprehensive anti-Lysenkoist piece in Yugoslavia, the book illustrated the complexity of discussing Lysenkoism in post-Stalinist Yugoslavia. Instead of summarily dismissing it, Yugoslav biologists and agronomists carefully differentiated between “deviated” and “sound” elements in the Michurinist biology. If the Yugoslav scientific leadership failed to protect Korić from militant students, he found an unlikely ally – the director of the department of Genetics, Carnegie Institution of Washington (now Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Milislav Demerec (1895-1966). Decades earlier, they had attended school in Croatia together. Acquainted with Korić’s situation, Demerec supplied and interpreted him with a variety of Western genetics and anti-Lysenkoist publications. The anti-Communist tone of many of these, however, made them problematic in the anti-Stalinist, yet still committedly socialist Yugoslavia. The paper will examine this and related examples of trans-Atlantic cooperation, focusing on the translation and usage of the Western anti-Lysenkoist efforts for specifically Yugoslav purposes in a time when Yugoslav scientific community drew ever more inspiration and resources from the West, but continued to build a “socialist science.”
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Povijest
POVEZANOST RADA
Projekti:
IP-06-2016-6762
Ustanove:
Hrvatska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti
Profili:
Vedran Duančić
(autor)