The dissolution of the
union between Sweden and Norway in 1905 sparked a renewed need to define Sweden as a cultural and political entity. The rapid expansion of the
Swedish Academy of Sciences offered the institutional space wherein this need could be further cultivated: nationalist narratives of Swedish scientific personas were produced on an extensive scale. This genre provided in Sweden the first production of a history of science. Two apt examples of this practice are
Eneström’s Bibliotheca mathematica (1984 – 1914) and Linnésällskapets Årsskrift (1918). After the events of the
first world war, the supposed progressive direction of science was discredited, and its historical study lost interest. It was not until the 1930s that the interest for a new history of science increased in Sweden. Important figures within this revival were
Eneström,
Arrhenius, von Hofsten, Nordenskiöld, Oseen, and, most famously,
Johan Nordström. In 1932 Nordström was appointed the first chair of History of Ideas (Idé- och lärdomshistoria) in
Uppsala. Influenced by figures ranging as widely as
Dilthey, Burckhardt,
Comte, Buckle, Tannery, and
Sarton, Nordström argued for a new social historical understanding of the history of science. History of science was considered at the base of history of ideas, Nordström writes: [...] history of science [...] should set out to depict scientific life in its totality and in its context, to focus on the essential features of progress, the basic opinions, the emergent new ideas, the great revolutionizing discoveries, and seek to establish their importance as factors shaping the cultural process. In 1934, Nordström founded the Swedish History of Science Association and its annual journal
Lychnos, in which he was involved as editor. He continued to hold his Chair in Uppsala until 1957. ==Nordström school==