New Books in Science, Technology, and Society

Andreas Killen, "Nervous Systems: Brain Science in the Early Cold War" (Harper, 2023)

Feb 1, 2026
Andreas Killen, historian and professor at City College, CUNY, and author of Nervous Systems, explores 1950s brain science and its cultural fallout. He traces breakthroughs like EEGs and awake surgery. He links Cold War paranoia, brainwashing claims, MKUltra, and pop culture portrayals. He follows threads from clinical cases to later continuities in interrogation and the War on Terror.
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ANECDOTE

A Bookstore Find Sparked The Project

  • Andreas Killen discovered Gray Walter's 1953 popular book The Living Brain in a local bookstore and used it as his research entry point.
  • That find shaped the book's trajectory and opened archival avenues he then pursued.
INSIGHT

Patients Interrupt the Scientific Narrative

  • Killen frames many chapters around scientists but inserts clinical tales focused on patients like H.M. to show human costs and complexity.
  • He separated patient stories to preserve ethical nuance and lived experience.
INSIGHT

The Living Brain Becomes Measurable

  • The 1950s opened the living brain to measurement through EEG, epilepsy surgery, and sensory deprivation research.
  • These converging techniques transformed memory and consciousness into tractable objects of scientific study.
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