1st Edition

Doing Science + Culture

Edited By Roddey Reid, Sharon Traweek Copyright 2000

    Doing Science + Culture is a groundbreaking book on the cultural study of science, technology and medicine. Outstanding contributors including life and physical scientists, anthropologists, sociologists, literature/communication scholars and historians of science who focus on the analysis of science and scientific discourses within culture: what it means to "do" science.

    Acknowledgments. Introduction: Researching Researchers. 1/Transnational Science and Globalization. Faultlines. Postcolonial Science, Big Science, and Landscape. Transnational Genomics. 2/Emerging Subjcects. Wonder Woman and Her Disciplinary Powers. Researcher or Smoker? The Ecstasy of Miscommunication. The Rationality of Mania. 3/Postdisciplinary Pedagogies and Programs. Mainstreaming Feminist Critiques into the Biology Curriculum. Reconceiving Scientific Literacy as Agential Literacy. Engineering Cultural Studies. Calling the Future(s) with Ethnographic and Historiographic Legacy Disciplines. Index.

    Biography

    Roddey Reid is Associate Professor of Literature at the University of California, San Diego. Sharon Traweek is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Los Angeles and author of Beamtimes and Lifetimes: The World of High Energy Physicists (1992).

    "This important collection by writers who refuse to stay put in their disciplines cleverly reflects the reader's gaze back onto ourselves to highlight the possibilities of experimentalism in research and pedagogy. Locating interdisciplinary work between scientific and cultural settings that reveal changing concepts of self and society, the contributors call attention to better forms of thinking that might be emerging. A must read for researchers and teachers trying to figure out how best to make a difference." -- Gary Downey, author of The Machine in Me
    "After the Cold War, comes Cultural Studies. Reid and Traweek give us a thoughtful, rigorous and multi-sited cultural studies. There is much to learn here." -- Paul Rabinow, University of California at Berkeley
    "This impressive collection is imbued with a fully examined sense of the post-Cold War conditions and new institutional arrangements in which both science and the cultural study of science are produced. It views the sciences as culturally diverse global processes, in which the dominance of Western science cannot be assumed. These features, plus contributions that report the best of current research in this field, make this a unique volume, a stimulating arena of inquiry accessible to a broad readership." -- George E. Marcus, Rice University