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Timothy Lenoir and Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht |
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| Science
is writing. Graphic traces produced in experiments and computer visualizations
are the precondition for other forms of literal and literary sense-making
as representations of nature are elaborated and interpreted. Scientists
write. They construct instruments to translate signals into inscriptions,
which are then assembled and manipulated as texts. In successive drafts
of scientific papers their writing is the site of theory production. The
Writing Science series brings together textual studies and science studies,
which share an epistemological and historical concern with the conditions
grounding the emergence of meaning and signification. Its authors are interested
in tangled and layered political and economic histories and the way they
become naturalized by signs. Inscribed into society through technologies
of writing, photography, film, museum exhibits, teaching materials, and
guidebooks, such signs subtend struggles to define both society and nature.
But language is not pure sign, it is also a thing. This exteriority -word as object rather than sense- is an irreducible element within the signifying scene. Language is tied to voice, to typeface, to bitmaps on a screen, to materiality. But graphic traces, visualizations are irreducible to words. Their interpretation is never fully controllable by the writing scientist. Writing Science volumes examine the ways scientific images and models depend upon material technologies of representation and reproduction at work in society. These resources include the media for producing signs, such as standardized paint pigments, photographic equipment, and phonographs - the materialities of communication. They invoke systems for delegating power. And they are infused with the social imaginary of historical narratives and legitimating ideological representations. The
Writing Science series investigates the culture of science: its practice-and-instrument-laden
character and its heterogeneous, disunified nature. Studies in Writing
Science treat scientific knowledge as always situated, local, and partial;
they explore how the work of theorists, experimenters, and technicians
is locally coordinated and the ways local contexts are multiplied in order
to account for the striking capacity of science to capture supposedly universal
features of the world. Writing Science volumes interrogate the ways in
which different domains of practice mesh locally and translate globally
to other sites, linking networks of heterogeneous actors and the literary
technologies they employ to fashion arguments and enroll other social worlds
into agreement.
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