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  1.  46
    Magic, science and masculinity: marketing toy chemistry sets.Salim Al-Gailani - 2009 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 40 (4):372-381.
    At least since the late nineteenth century, toy chemistry sets have featured in standard scripts of the achievement of eminence in science, and they remain important in constructions of scientific identity. Using a selection of these toys manufactured in Britain and the United States, and with particular reference to the two dominant American brands, Gilbert and Chemcraft, this paper suggests that early twentieth-century chemistry sets were rooted in overlapping Victorian traditions of entertainment magic and scientific recreations. As chemistry set marketing (...)
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  2.  15
    Introduction to “Transforming pregnancy since 1900”.Salim Al-Gailani & Angela Davis - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 47:229-232.
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  3.  20
    Making birth defects ‘preventable’: Pre-conceptional vitamin supplements and the politics of risk reduction.Salim Al-Gailani - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 47:278-289.
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  4.  5
    A fetus in the world: Physiology, epidemiology, and the making of fetal origins of adult disease.Tatjana Buklijas & Salim Al-Gailani - 2023 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 45 (4):1-34.
    Since the late 1980s, the fetal origins of adult disease, from 2003 developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD), has stimulated significant interest in and an efflorescence of research on the long-term effects of the intrauterine environment. From the start, this field has been interdisciplinary, using experimental animal, clinical and epidemiological tools. As the influence of DOHaD on public health and policy expanded, it has drawn criticism for reducing the complex social and physical world of early life to women’s reproductive (...)
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  5.  7
    ‘Drawing aside the curtain’: natural childbirth on screen in 1950s Britain.Salim Al-Gailani - 2017 - British Journal for the History of Science 50 (3):473-493.
    This article recovers the importance of film, and its relations to other media, in communicating the philosophies and methods of ‘natural childbirth’ in the post-war period. It focuses on an educational film made in South Africa around 1950 by controversial British physician Grantly Dick-Read, who had achieved international fame with bestselling books arguing that relaxation and education, not drugs, were the keys to freeing women from pain in childbirth. But he soon came to regard the ‘vivid’ medium of film as (...)
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