Adelheid Voskuhl

Adelheid Voskuhl

Associate Professor, History & Sociology of Science

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Research Interests

Heidi Voskuhl's research field comprises the history of technology from the early modern to the modern period. Her broader interests include the philosophy of technology, the history of the Enlightenment, and modern European intellectual and cultural history.

Selected Publications

Androids in the Enlightenment: Mechanics, Artisans, and Cultures of the Self (University of Chicago Press, 2013). Winner of the Jacques Barzun Prize in Cultural History of the American Philosophical Society, 2014.

“Emancipation in the Industrial Age: Technology, Rationality, and the Cold War in Habermas’s Early Epistemology and Social Theory.” Forthcoming in Modern Intellectual History.

“Engineering Philosophy: Theories of Technology, German Idealism, and Social Order in High-Industrial Germany.” Technology and Culture 57, issue 3 (2016). 

“Self-Knowledge in the History of Technology: Industrialism, Cultural Analysis, and Desire.” History and Technology 30:3 (2014), 275-279. 

"Producing Objects, Producing Texts: Accounts of Android Automata in Late 18th-century Europe." Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 38 (2007), 422-444.

"Humans, Machines, and Conversations: An Ethnographic Study of the Making of Automatic Speech Recognition Technologies." Social Studies of Science 34 (2004), 393-421. 

"Recreating Herschel's Actinometry: An essay in the historiography of experimental practice." British Journal for the History of Science, 1997 (30), 337-355