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  • Awards

NASA Fellowship

The NASA Fellowship in the History of Space Technology, offered by SHOT and supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) History Division, funds either a predoctoral or postdoctoral fellow for up to one academic year to undertake a research project related to the history of space technology. The fellowship supports advanced research related to all aspects of space history, leading to publications on the history of space technology broadly considered, including cultural and intellectual history, institutional history, economic history, history of law and public policy, and history of engineering and management. In 2017 SHOT, the History of Science Society (HSS), and the American Historical Association (AHA) brought their NASA Fellowship Committees together. Each society continues to award a NASA Fellowship, but a committee consisting of one member from each organization will determine the winners of the three fellowships. This year's fellowship went to Rebecca A. Perry, of the University of Virginia Department of Engineering and Society, with the following citation:

The winner of the 2018 SHOT-NASA Fellowship is Dr. Rebecca A. Perry, currently serving as a research associate at the Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum as well as the University of Virginia Department of Engineering and Society. Perry was awarded this fellowship for her proposed book project Filming the Future: Planetary Voyages and Computer Graphics at NASA/JPL (Jet Propulsion Laboratory). Perry's expertise in science journalism as both a visual journalist and graphics editor, combined with her Ph.D. in history, anthropology, and science, technology & society from MIT render her uniquely poised for this study. In this book project, Perry will explore the introduction of a new field of image-making to JPL, the work necessary to describe and understand these new images, and the professional communities affected by turning the computer's gaze into space. By creating images and animated films of JPL's Voyager missions, a small team of computer researchers, engineers, [End Page 278] and artists advanced the field of CG. Collaborating with image processing specialists, they collectively pushed the limits of computer hardware, developing new devices and techniques intended to meet the needs of scientific communities. A new field of subject matter experts emerged with a stake in determining what constituted scientific data and what was a derivation—including composites, image mosaics, computer-assembled mosaics, and computer graphic images. Who determined what constituted acceptable image manipulation? How did "seeing with CG" compare with other sensors and imaging technologies? These novel instruments of visualization enabled a new style of late-seventies public outreach dubbed "instant science" and "science by press conference." At the same time, Perry contends that ideas and images from JPL's Computer Graphics Laboratory team disseminated into local professional networks of computer animators, writers, and film directors in nearby 1970s and '80s Hollywood. Thus, Perry's project will undoubtedly contribute to contemporary literature that aims to more clearly articulate the interplay between NASA and broader society, both in terms of scientific outreach as well as NASA-private sector relations.

Kranzberg Dissertation Fellowship

This award is in memory of the co-founder of the Society, and honors Melvin Kranzberg's many contributions to developing the history of technology as a field of scholarly endeavor and SHOT as a professional organization. The $4,000 award is given to a doctoral student engaged in the preparation of a dissertation on the history of technology, broadly defined, and may be used in any way chosen by the winner to advance the research and writing of that dissertation. The winner of this year's award was Angélica Agredo Montealegre of King's College London for "Road Construction and Maintenance in the Developing World: The Cases of Colombia, Argentina, French West Africa and the Algerian Sahara, 1950s–1960s." The citation follows:

The prize committee is pleased to announce Angélica Agredo Montealegre as the winner of the 2018 Kranzberg Dissertation Fellowship. Agredo Montealegre, a Ph.D. student in History at King's College London, will use the award to complete her dissertation, "Road Construction and Maintenance in the Developing World: The Cases of Colombia, Argentina, French West Africa and the Algerian Sahara, 1950s-1960s." Her ambitious comparative study explores a critically...

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