Award Abstract # 0322274
The Impact of the Stalinist System on Science: Nuclear, Low Temperature and Theoretical Physics in Ukraine, 1930-1960

NSF Org: SES
Division of Social and Economic Sciences
Recipient: PRESIDENT AND TRUSTEES OF COLBY COLLEGE
Initial Amendment Date: July 11, 2003
Latest Amendment Date: April 28, 2005
Award Number: 0322274
Award Instrument: Fixed Amount Award
Program Manager: Ronald Rainger
SES
 Division of Social and Economic Sciences
SBE
 Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences
Start Date: July 1, 2003
End Date: December 31, 2005 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $32,934.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $32,934.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2003 = $32,934.00
History of Investigator:
  • Paul Josephson (Principal Investigator)
    prjoseph@colby.edu
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Colby College
4120 MAYFLOWER HILL
WATERVILLE
ME  US  04901-8841
(207)859-4342
Sponsor Congressional District: 01
Primary Place of Performance: Colby College
4120 MAYFLOWER HILL
WATERVILLE
ME  US  04901-8841
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
01
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): EP1ALCV8VN65
Parent UEI: EP1ALCV8VN65
NSF Program(s): Hist & Philosophy of SET
Primary Program Source: app-0103 
Program Reference Code(s): 0000, 9150, OTHR
Program Element Code(s): 135300
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.075

ABSTRACT

Project Abstract
SES 0322274
Paul Josephson, Colby College
"The Impact of the Stalinist System on Science: Nuclear, Low Temperature, and Theoretical Physics in Ukraine, 1930-1960"


Ukraine was a leading center of nuclear, theoretical and low temperature physics in the 1930s. Niels Bohr, Paul Dirac, P. M. S. Blackett and Boris Podolsky, among many others, visited its renowned center of research in Kharkiv, the Ukrainian Physical Technical
Institute (UFTI). Kirill Sinelnikov, who studied with Ernest Rutherford in Cambridge, directed the institute for many years, while future Nobel laureate Lev Landau began his career at UFTI.
Leading Soviet physicists and representatives of the Communist Party set out to establish UFTI at the beginning of Stalin's crash program for industrialization and forced collectivization of agriculture in the late 1920s. Within a few years, the Great Terror commenced, leading to the arrest, interrogation, imprisonment and execution of millions of innocent citizens. The purges seem to have reached an intensity in Kharkiv unrivaled elsewhere in the USSR. In this project, a uniquely qualified international team of researchers will examine in great detail the history of Ukrainian physics. Specifically, using materials in government and institute archives, interviews, and local newspapers, the researchers will explore the impact of the Stalinist system on the physics community. By impact of the Stalinist system we mean: centralization of science policy; an emphasis on applied science at the expense of basic research; the introduction of a new system of planning of scientific activity; the establishment of autarky or international isolation in science; and the ideologization of science.
This project will make several important contributions to the history of science. First, it will add to our understanding of the interaction of Stalinism and science. Second, it will reveal to what extent the experience of Ukrainian scientists differed from that of scientists in the physics discipline elsewhere in the USSR. Third, it will add a new chapter to the growing literature on cold war science. Fourth, by providing modest funding to Ukrainian specialists and several graduate assistants, it will support science studies which we believe are important to the ongoing evaluation of the place of science in contemporary Ukraine.

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