Fortuns List ordered - figuringoutmethods

4 downloads 145 Views 62KB Size Report
Anthropological Futures. Durham: Duke University Press. Marcus, George E. ed. 2000. Para-‐Sites: A Casebook against Cynical Reason. Late Editions. Chicago:.
Kirk  Jalbert   Research  Design  –  Spring  2012     Lit  Reviews  –  Kim  Fortun  &  Mike  Fortun     Articulating  and  Communicating  Science   Caputi,  Jane.  (1995)  ‘The  Metaphors  of  Radiation,  Or  Why  a  Beautiful  Woman  is  Like  a  Nuclear   Power  Plant’,  Women’s  Studies  International  Forum,  14(5):  423-­‐442,  p.430   Daston,  Lorraine  and  Katherine  Park.  1998.  Wonders  and  The  Order  of  Nature,  1150-­‐1750.  New   York:  Zone  Books.   Daston,  L.,  &  Lunbeck,  E.  (2011).  Histories  of  scientific  observation.  Chicago:  University  of  Chicago   Press.   Fortun,  L.  (2004).  Environmental  Information  Systems  as  Appropriate  Technology.  Design  Issues:   Summer  2004,  Vol.  20,  No.  3,  Pages  54-­‐65.   Galison,  P.,  &  Stump,  D.  J.  (1996).  The  Disunity  of  science:  Boundaries,  contexts,  and  power.  Stanford,   Calif:  Stanford  University  Press.   Galison,  Peter.  1997.  Image  and  Logic:  A  Material  Culture  of  Microphysics.  Chicago:  University  of   Chicago  Press.   Gieryn,  T.  F.  (1999).  Cultural  boundaries  of  science:  Credibility  on  the  line.  Chicago:  University  of   Chicago  Press.   Lenoir,  T.  (1998).  Inscribing  science:  Scientific  texts  and  the  materiality  of  communication.  Stanford,   Calif:  Stanford  University  Press.     Mitchell,  L.  and  Cambrosio,  A.  (1997)  The  Invisible  Topography  of  Power:     Electromagnetic  Fields,  Bodies  and  the  Environment,  Social  Studies  of  Science,  27:221.   Pauwels,  L.  (2006).  Visual  cultures  of  science:  Rethinking  representational  practices  in  knowledge   building  and  science  communication.  Hanover,  N.H:  Dartmouth  College  Press.     Porter,  T.  M.  (1995).  Trust  in  numbers:  The  pursuit  of  objectivity  in  science  and  public  life.  Princeton,   N.J:  Princeton  University  Press.   Proctor,  Robert.  Value-­‐Free  Science:Purity  and  Power  in  Modern  Knowledge,  Cambridge,   Massachusetts:  Harvard  University  Press,  1991.     Scientific  Practices   Bowker,  Geoffrey  C.  2005.  Memory  Practices  in  the  Sciences.  Cambridge,  MA:  MIT  Press.   Bowker,  Geoffrey  C.,  and  Susan  Leigh  Star.  2000.  Sorting  Things  Out:  Classification  and  Its   Consequences.  Cambridge  (MA):  MIT  Press.   Fischer,  Michael  M.  J.  2009.  Anthropological  Futures.  Durham:  Duke  University  Press.   Marcus,  George  E.  ed.2000.  Para-­‐Sites:  A  Casebook  against  Cynical  Reason.  Late  Editions.  Chicago:   University  of  Chicago  Press.   Kaiser,  David.  Pedagogy  and  the  practice  of  science:  historical  and  contemporary  perspectives,  The   MIT  Press,  2005   Kohler,  R.  E.  (2002).  Landscapes  &  labscapes:  Exploring  the  lab-­‐field  border  in  biology.  Chicago:   University  of  Chicago  Press.   Rabinow,  Paul  (2003)  Anthropos  Today:  Reflections  on  Modern  Equipment.  Princeton,  NJ:  Princeton   University  Press  .   Shapin,  S.  (2008).  The  scientific  life:  A  moral  history  of  a  late  modern  vocation.  Chicago:  University  of   Chicago  Press.   Shapin,  S.  (2010).  Never  pure:  Historical  studies  of  science  as  if  it  was  produced  by  people  with  bodies,   situated  in  time,  space,  culture,  and  society,  and  struggling  for  credibility  and  authority.   Baltimore,  Md:  Johns  Hopkins  University  Press.   Shapin,  Steven,  and  Simon  Schaffer.  1985.  Leviathan  and  the  Air  Pump.  Princeton:  Princeton  

University  Press.   Wenger,  Etienne.  (1998)  Communities  of  Practice:  Learning,  Meaning,  and  Identity.  Cambridge:   Cambridge  University  Press     Scientific  Imaginaries  &  Epistemic  Communities   Fischer,  M.  M.  J.  (2005),  Technoscientific  Infrastructures  and  Emergent  Forms  of  Life:  A   Commentary.  American  Anthropologist,  107:  55–61.     Fortun,  K.  and  Fortun,  M.  (2005),  Scientific  Imaginaries  and  Ethical  Plateaus  in  Contemporary  U.S.   Toxicology.  American  Anthropologist,  107:  43–54.     Jasanoff,  S.  2001.  “Image  and  Imagination.”  In  Clark  Miller  and  Paul  Edwards,  eds.  Changing  the   Atmosphere:  Expert  Knowledge  and  Environmental  Governance  (pp.  309-­‐337).  MIT  Press.   Karin  Knorr  Cetina,  Epistemic  Cultures:  How  the  Sciences  Make  Knowledge,  Harvard  University,   1999.   Latour,  B.  1990.  “Drawing  Things  Together,”  in  Michael  Lynch  and  Steve  Woolgar,   eds.,  Representation  in  Scientific  Practice.  MIT  Press.  pp.  19-­‐68.   Marcus,  G.  E.  (1995).  Technoscientific  imaginaries:  Conversations,  profiles,  and  memoirs.  Chicago:   University  of  Chicago  Press.   Polanyi,  M.  1962.  “The  Republic  of  Science,”  Minerva  1:54-­‐74.   Rheinberger  Hans-­‐Jörg.  (1997).  Toward  a  History  of  Epistemic  Things:  Synthesizing  Proteins  in  the   Test  Tube.  Stanford:  Stanford  University  Press.   Taylor,  C.  (2004).  Modern  social  imaginaries.  Durham:  Duke  University  Press.