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Posted Tue, 27 May 2003 15:36:43
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Cultures of Techno science - Ethnography, Humans/Machines, and Objectivity

Anchor teacher: professor Lucy Suchman

Centre for Science Studies Lancaster University

WTMC Summer school 8-12 September 2003

Since the first laboratory ethnographies at the end of the 1970s, science
and technology studies have developed unique insights into the
heterogeneity of scientific and technological cultures. This work made
clear that 'science' is not a unified phenomenon, living a life of its own
separate from other social sectors. This contradicted the tradition, still
strong today, to speak of science as a unique, unified way to produce
knowledge. Many claims on behalf of science or high technology are based on
this image. Science studies has made clear that knowledge is situated
knowledge. Objectivity is bounded, contextualized, and therefore relative
objectivity. Instead of the scientific culture, it seems more productive to
speak of scientific cultures. Even the sub domain of techno science,
presently the most prestigious form of knowledge production, is carried out
through a variety of ways of living and forms of knowing.

This year's WTMC Summer School takes as its central theme techno scientific
cultures and ways to study them. Ethnographic studies of techno science
will be presented and discussed, with a focus on new insights into the
changing relationship between humans and machines. And we will take a
closer look at how scientific objectivities are being produced in the
context of the techno sciences.

Professor Lucy Suchman is a founding contributor to the ethnographic study
of techno science. (See
http://www.comp.lancs.ac.uk/sociology/lsuchman.html) She worked for twenty
years at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, where she led the development
of anthropological research into technological design. She has acquired
fame as a specialist in human-machine interaction and in theories of the
relationship between humans and machines. Suchman is a Collaborating Editor
of Social Studies of Science. She has received a number of awards for her
work, among them the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Computer and Cognitive Science.

The location is Study- and Conference Centre Soeterbeeck in Ravenstein in
the Netherlands. The Summer School is part of the graduate training of the
PhD students in the Netherlands. A limited number of places are available
for other (foreign) PhD students. The fee is EURO 635 (excl. meals and
hotel room), the reduced rate for EASST members is EURO 545. EASST has a
tradition of making a few travel stipends available. Please inquire at the
EASST secretariat.

For registration please use the online registration form:
http://www.wmw.utwente.nl/wtmc/ ( see announcement 'International WTMC
Summer School 2003 '/online registration form)

For information and registration: Marjatta Kemppainen, University of
Twente, [log in to unmask] , phone +31-53-489 4847, fax
+31-53-489 4775.

May we ask you to mention this Summer School to PhD students  who might be
interested?

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