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History and Technology
An International Journal
Volume 27, 2011 - Issue 2
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History and Technology Forum

Author response

Pages 213-222 | Published online: 18 Jul 2011
 

Notes

1. Pamela Smith has not only been concerned with embodied skills in Body of the Artisan, but also materiality and knowledge-making. We have been talking about these issues since she and Paula Findlen were running the conference that resulted in Merchants and Marvels.

2. Tilly, Formation of National States.

3. Mukerji, Territorial Ambitions.

4. See Shapin, Social History of Truth, and Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy which were being discussed or written at UCSD when I started this research.

5. Mukerji, ‘Territorial State as Figured.’

6. Mitchell, Rule of Experts.

7. Law, ‘Technology and Heterogeneous Engineering.’

8. Latour, ‘Why has Critique.’

9. Bowker and Star, Sorting Things Out.

10. Mukerji, ‘Jurisdiction, Inscription.’

11. Joyce, ‘Filing the Raj.’

12. Becker and Clark, Little Tools of Knowledge.

13. Knorr-Cetina, Epistemic Cultures.

14. Schiebinger, Mind Has No Sex?

15. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy. Martin not only wrote on gentlemen in science, but also the role of landscape in field sciences.

16. Epstein, Impure Science. Steve and I even taught a graduate seminar together on formal and informal knowledge, focusing on questions of competence and credibility.

17. Serres, Rome.

18. Serres does not make the distinction in Rome between humans and nonhumans like ANT scholars, who analyze ‘connections’ between scientific thinkers and nonhuman actants. Rather, he treats humans as nonhumans, discarding the idea that there is something special about human being defined by consciousness. Latour is closer to Serres in this regard, see Reassembling the Social. Compare with Olsen, ‘Material Culture after Text.’

19. For my effort to explain strategics and logistics in relation to extant social theories of power, see Mukerji, ‘Territorial State as Figured.’

20. Padden and Humphries, Inside Deaf Culture. Carol Padden’s new work on the development of new sign languages in Bedouin villages with a growing deaf community is particularly compelling in showing how languages and artifacts are connected in the cognitive worlds of villagers.

21. Star and Griesemer, ‘Institutional Ecology.’

22. Joyce, Rule of Freedom.

23. Goldstein, Vaux and Versailles.

24. Soll, Information Master.

25. Drayton, Nature’s Government.

26. Mukerji, ‘Material Practices of Domination.’

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