• Title/Summary/Keyword: Technoscientific Practices

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'Techno-scientific Way of Thinking' on Women's Technoscientific Practices : From Barad's Agential Realistic Perspectives (여성들의 기술과학 실행에 대한 '기술-과학적 방식의 생각하기': 캐런 바라드의 행위적 실재론을 중심으로)

  • Leem, So-Yeon
    • Journal of Science and Technology Studies
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    • v.11 no.2
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    • pp.97-119
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    • 2011
  • This paper, as an initiative to fertilize analyses on women's technoscientific practices, reviews theoretical discussions and empirical studies in-between feminism and STS, mainly owing its thinking technologies to Karen Barad's Agential Realism. The first part of this paper shows that women's technoscientific practices as research sites are not only fertile grounds between STS and feminism but also conflict areas between constructivist theories and feminist politics. The second part proposes Agential Realism as an way of thinking to deal with 'conflicts' between STS and feminism in analytical levels. Agential Realism provides useful conceptual tools for 'techno-scientific ways of thinking' through the reconceptualization of agency, the displacement of agency by accountability, and the configuration of STS analysis as 'apparatus.' The third part finds three examples of 'techno-scientific ways of thinking' on women's technscientific practices from previous feminist STS works, which suggests how to analyze not only women's technoscientific practices but also diverse practices of science, technology, and medicine as follows: follow 'the invisible', account for 'ontological choreography', and 'care' for what is analyzed.

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The Grey Box of Technoscientific Practices: Laboratory as a Heterotopic Space where In/visible Collaborations Take Place (과학적 실행의 회색상자(grey box): 비/가시적 협력의 헤테로토피아(heterotopia)로서의 실험실 공간)

  • Lee, June Seok
    • Journal of Science and Technology Studies
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.1-39
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    • 2013
  • How would technoscientists collaborate in their technoscientific practices? Based on the ethnographic research done at NRI(Neuroscience Research Institute), this research shows how collaboration occurs in/outside the interdisciplinary laboratory. As previous studies show, collaboration makes researches possible that otherwise would have been impossible. Korean technoscientists who are situated in the scientific periphery, practice contextualized collaboration in their labs. These collaborations are invisible before opening the black box of the lab. But it acquires visibility after certain incidents such as collaborations, debates and discussions, malfunctioning of the instruments, and networking with other actors occur. These networks again become invisible after the certain incidents end. However these blackboxing and whiteboxing (opening the blackbox) processes occur simultaneously in various levels, it is almost impossible to identify them separately. In real technoscientific practices, blackboxing and whiteboxing do not occur distinctively. They almost always occur at the same time on multi-layered levels, hence forming the 'grey box' of technoscientific practices. Lastly, collaborations inside laboratory have in/visible features, because laboratories function as Foucauldian heterotopias.

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