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9 Picking Back Up and Moving On in the Postwar World
-
Karen Hunger Parshall
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- PREFACE xi
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xxiii
- ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE FOOTNOTES AND TABLES FOR AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL PUBLICATIONS xxvii
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PART I 1920–1929: “We are evidently on the verge of important steps forward.”
- 1 Surveying the 1920s Research Landscape 3
- 2 Strengthening the Infrastructure of American Mathematics 63
- 3 Breaking onto the International Scene 102
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PART II 1929–1941: “A generation ago we were in need of direct stimulation . . . now we could well interchange.” —Griffith Evans, 16 January, 1934
- 4 Sustaining the Momentum? 147
- 5 Adapting to Geopolitical Changes 191
- 6 Taking Stock in a Changing World 232
- 7 Looking beyond the United States 287
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PA RT III 1941–1950: The “center of gravity of mathematics has moved more definitely toward America.” —Roland Richardson, 25 April, 1939
- 8 Waging War 339
- 9 Picking Back Up and Moving On in the Postwar World 397
- 10 Sustaining and Building Research Agendas 431
- CODA: A new era in American mathematics 476
- The New Domestic Politics of Mathematics 477
- The New Geopolitics of Mathematics 484
- The International Congress of Mathematicians: Cambridge, MA, 1950 496
- REFERENCES 511
- INDEX 567
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- PREFACE xi
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xxiii
- ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE FOOTNOTES AND TABLES FOR AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL PUBLICATIONS xxvii
-
PART I 1920–1929: “We are evidently on the verge of important steps forward.”
- 1 Surveying the 1920s Research Landscape 3
- 2 Strengthening the Infrastructure of American Mathematics 63
- 3 Breaking onto the International Scene 102
-
PART II 1929–1941: “A generation ago we were in need of direct stimulation . . . now we could well interchange.” —Griffith Evans, 16 January, 1934
- 4 Sustaining the Momentum? 147
- 5 Adapting to Geopolitical Changes 191
- 6 Taking Stock in a Changing World 232
- 7 Looking beyond the United States 287
-
PA RT III 1941–1950: The “center of gravity of mathematics has moved more definitely toward America.” —Roland Richardson, 25 April, 1939
- 8 Waging War 339
- 9 Picking Back Up and Moving On in the Postwar World 397
- 10 Sustaining and Building Research Agendas 431
- CODA: A new era in American mathematics 476
- The New Domestic Politics of Mathematics 477
- The New Geopolitics of Mathematics 484
- The International Congress of Mathematicians: Cambridge, MA, 1950 496
- REFERENCES 511
- INDEX 567