=LDR 05353nam 22003612 4500 =001 89d1e59f-8780-44ce-a0d3-8aead89e99b9 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20172017\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$a9780995527744$q(HTML) =024 7\$a10.28938/995527744$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aJHMC$2bicssc =072 7$aSOC002010$2bisacsh =072 7$aJHMC$2thema =245 04$aThe Ethnographic Case /$cedited by Emily Yates-Doerr, Christine Labuski. =264 \4$c©2017 =300 \\$a1 online resource. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aavailable online only =505 0\$aTable of Contents1. The Book-CASE: Introduction. Emily Yates-Doerr & Christine Labuski2. Exemplary: The Case of the Farmer and the Turpentine. Annemarie Mol3. Autophony: Listening to Your Eyes Move. Anna Harris4. Encased: Plotting Attentions Through Distraction. Melissa Biggs and John Bodinger de Uriarte5. No Judgments: Fieldwork on the Spectrum. Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp6. Facial Paralysis: Somaticizing Frustration in Guatemala. Nicholas Copeland7. “He Didn’t Blow Us Up”: Routine Violence and Non-event as Case. Ken MacLeish8. What’s in a Name? Ruth Goldstein9. Normalizing Sexually Violated Bodies: Sexual Assault Adjudication, Medical Evidence, and the Legal Case. Sameena Mulla10. Case by Case. Jason Danely11. The Case of the Ugly Sperm. Janelle Lamoreaux12. Waiting in the Face of Bare Life. Aaron Ansell13. Crossing Boundaries: Making Sense with the Sense-able. Christy Spackman14. Swamp Dialogues: Filming Ethnography. Ildikó Zonga Plájás15. What is a Family? Refugee DNA and the Possible Truths of Kinship. Carole McGranahan16. A Polygraphic Casebook. Susan Reynolds Whyte17. Traveling within the Case. Atsuro Morita18. The Case of the Cake: Dilemmas of Giving and Taking. Rima Praspaliauskiene19. From Fish Lives to Fish Law: Learning to See Indigenous Legal Orders in Canada. Zoe Todd20. Ethnographic Case, Legal Case: From the Spirit of the Law to the Law of the Spirit. André Menard and Constanza Tizzoni21. The Enclosed Case. Elizabeth Lewis22. Making Cases for a Technological Fix: Germany’s Energy Transition and the Green Good Life. Jennifer Carlson23. Filming Sex/Gender: The Ethics of (Mis)representation. Anna Wilking24. Three Millimeters. Christine Labuski25. The Discernment of Knowledge: Sexualized Violence in the Mennonite Church. Stephanie Krehbiel26. Earthly Togetherness: Making a Case for Living with Worms. Filippo Bertoni27. Extractivism, Refusals, and the Unearthing of Failure. Teresa Velasquez28. Fixing Things, Moving Stories. Jenna Grant29. Conclusion. Emily Yates-Doerr =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aA doctor injects turpentine into the leg of a dying patient; the patient lives and years later a granddaughter uses this story of survival to write a story of her own. A refugee is questioned in court for falsifying paternity; a cultural expert intervenes to develop a legal case for kinship that exceeds DNA. A caring father lives a powerful truth, though a filmmaker must misrepresent Ecuadorian prostitutes in order to share it. In all three cases, “the case” shapes possibilities for action. In all three cases, “the case” is different than it was the case before.The Ethnographic Case challenges a widespread academic inclination to treat concepts as immutable mobiles. The contributions to this volume develop “ethnographic casing” as a technique of attending to heterogeneities in systems of thought. Medical cases. Legal cases. Briefcases. Detective cases. Some cases featured are violent, others compassionate; some set stereotypes in motion, others break them down. Connected more by difference than similarity, the “cases” in this volume make a case for the virtue of relational science. This is a science that is not beholden to the masters’ narratives, but which embraces the double-work of caring for detail, while caring for the practices through which one learns to care. In 26 gripping and provocative installations, the volume showcases research from numerous influential feminist and decolonial scholars. Where anthropology has long sought to identify patterns in culture, this volume makes space for inquiry focused on particularities and advocates for an intellectual politics where that which doesn’t fit is still allowed to matter. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =700 1\$aYates-Doerr, Emily,$eeditor.$uUniversity of Amsterdam.$0(orcid)0000000208957136$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0895-7136 =700 1\$aLabuski, Christine,$eeditor.$uVirginia Tech.$0(orcid)0000000266202495$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6620-2495 =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/995527744$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 07425nam 22008532 4500 =001 8610efab-7a5b-4078-9770-ab39d79329d2 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20232023\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9781912729340$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9781912729326$q(PDF) =020 \\$a9781912729333$q(HTML) =020 \\$a9781912729074$q(Epub) =024 7\$a10.28938/9781912729340$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSOC002010$2bisacsh =072 7$aMED058090$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC062000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC029000$2bisacsh =072 7$aLAW027000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC064000$2bisacsh =072 7$aPOL012000$2bisacsh =072 7$aMED113000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSCI092000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSCI030000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC066000$2bisacsh =072 7$aHEA024000$2bisacsh =072 7$aREL028000$2bisacsh =072 7$aPER011000$2bisacsh =072 7$aBUS070150$2bisacsh =072 7$aTEC010030$2bisacsh =072 7$aMED022020$2bisacsh =072 7$aTEC031010$2bisacsh =072 7$aMED033000$2bisacsh =072 7$aJHMC$2thema =072 7$aMBS$2thema =072 7$aJBSL11$2thema =072 7$aJBFM$2thema =072 7$aLNFJ2$2thema =072 7$aJBSJ$2thema =072 7$aJWX$2thema =072 7$aMBPN$2thema =072 7$aRNP$2thema =072 7$aRGBF$2thema =072 7$aJBFG$2thema =072 7$aVFDW$2thema =072 7$aQRAM$2thema =072 7$aATDS$2thema =072 7$aKNAT$2thema =072 7$aTQSW$2thema =072 7$aMJCJ2$2thema =072 7$aTHVS$2thema =072 7$aMKC$2thema =245 04$aThe Ethnographic Case /$cedited by Emily Yates-Doerr, Christine Labuski. =250 \\$aSecond edition. =264 \1$aManchester :$bMattering Press,$c2023. =264 \4$c©2023 =300 \\$a1 online resource (256 pages). =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$a0. Foreword, Christine Labuski and Emily Yates-Doerr1. Introduction, Emily Yates-Doerr & Christine Labuski2. Exemplary: The case of the farmer and the turpentine, Annemarie Mol3. Autophony: Listening to your eyes move, Anna Harris4. Encased: Plotting attentions through distraction, Melissa S. Biggs and John Bodinger de Uriarte5. No judgments: Fieldwork on the spectrum, Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp6. Facial paralysis: Somaticising frustration in Guatemala, Nicholas Copeland7. ‘He didn’t blow us up’ – routine violence and non-event as case, Ken MacLeish8. What’s in a name? A case of trafficking in other people’s stories, Ruth Goldstein9. Normalising sexually violated bodies: Sexual assault adjudication, medical evidence and the legal case, Sameena Mulla10. Case by case, Jason Danely11. The case of the ugly sperm, Janelle Lamoreaux12. Waiting in the face of bare life, Aaron Ansell13. Crossing boundaries: The case for making sense with the sense-able, Christy Spackman14. Swamp dialogues: Filming ethnography, Ildikó Zonga Plájás15. What is a family? Refugee DNA and the possible truths of kinship, Carole McGranahan16. A polygraphic casebook, Susan Reynolds Whyte17. Travelling within the case, Atsuro Morita18. The case of the cake: Dilemmas of giving and taking, Rima Praspaliauskiene19. From fish lives to fish law: Learning to see Indigenous legal orders in Canada, Zoe Todd20. Ethnographic case, legal case: From the spirit of the law to the law of the spirit, André Menard and Constanza Tizzoni21. The enclosed case, Elizabeth Lewis22. Making Cases for a Technological Fix: Germany’s Energy Transition and the Green Good Life, Jennifer Carlson23. Filming sex/gender: The ethics of (mis)representation, Anna Wilking24. Three millimetres, Christine Labuski25. The discernment of knowledge: Sexualised violence in the Mennonite church, Stephanie Krehbiel26. Earthly togetherness: Making a case for living with worms,Filippo Bertoni27. Refusing extraction: Unearthing the messiness of activist research, Teresa A. Velásquez28. Fixing things, moving stories, Jenna Grant29. The ethnographic case: In-conclusion, Anna Dowrick, Julien McHardy, Joe Deville =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aThe 1st Edition of The Ethnographic Case, published in 2017, was an experiment in post-publication peer review, with the book published online and open to comments from readers. In this new 2nd edition, to be published later this year, the editors and authors have updated the text, both in response to these comments and taking into account changing contexts in the years since the book’s first publication. The Ethnographic Case: A doctor injects turpentine into the leg of a dying patient; the patient lives and years later a granddaughter uses this story of survival to write a story of her own. A refugee is questioned in court for falsifying paternity; a cultural expert intervenes to develop a legal case for kinship that exceeds DNA. The actions of a caring father pose a dilemma for how a filmmaker represents Ecuadorian sex workers. In all three chapters, “the case” shapes possibilities for action. In each chapter, the practice of case-making is also specific to the details of the case. The Ethnographic Case challenges a widespread academic inclination to treat concepts as immutable mobiles. The contributions to this volume develop “ethnographic casing” as a technique of attending to heterogeneities in systems of thought. Medical cases. Legal cases. Museum showcases. Detective cases. Some cases featured are violent, others compassionate; some set stereotypes in motion, others break them down. Connected more by difference than similarity, the “cases” in this volume make a case for the virtue of relational science. This is a science that is not beholden to master narratives, but which embraces the double-work of caring for detail, while caring for the practices through which one learns to care. In 26 gripping and provocative installations, the volume showcases research from numerous influential feminist and decolonial scholars. Where anthropology has long sought to identify patterns in culture, this volume makes space for inquiry focused on particularities and advocates for an intellectual politics where that which seemingly doesn’t fit is still allowed to matter. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =700 1\$aYates-Doerr, Emily,$eeditor.$uUniversity of Amsterdam.$0(orcid)0000000208957136$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0895-7136 =700 1\$aLabuski, Christine,$eeditor.$uVirginia Tech.$0(orcid)0000000266202495$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6620-2495 =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9781912729340$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/ethnographic-case-cover-1046x1536.png$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 05335nam 22005172 4500 =001 4647e252-40e8-4df2-8603-1f0c16329b7f =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20212021\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9781912729180$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9781912729197$q(PDF) =020 \\$a9781912729210$q(HTML) =020 \\$a9781912729203$q(Epub) =024 7\$a10.28938/9781912729180$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSOC002010$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC019000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC071000$2bisacsh =100 1\$aRest, Matthäus,$eauthor.$uMax Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.$0(orcid)0000000260252686$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6025-2686 =245 10$aWith Microbes /$cedited by Charlotte Brives, Salla Sariola; Matthäus Rest. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2021. =264 \4$c©2021 =300 \\$a1 online resource (290 pages): $b17 illustrations, 1 table. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 7Acknowledgements 9Contributors 11Introducing With Microbes: From witnessing to withnessing. The Kilpisjärvi Collective, 17____I : SENSING1 · The Deplantationocene: Listening to yeasts and rejecting the plantation worldview. Denis Chartier, 432 · Knowing, living, and being with bokhasi. Veera Kinnunen, 643 · Oimroas: Notes on a summer alpine journey. Matthäus Rest, 844 · Building 'natural' immunities: Cultivation of human-microbe relations in vaccine-refusing families. Johanna Nurmi, 100II : REGULATING5 · When cultures meet: Microbes, permeable bodies and the environment. Katriina Huttunen, Elina Oinas and Salla Sariola, 1216 · Bathing in black water? The microbiopolitics of the River Seine's ecological reclamation. Marine Legrand and Germain Meulemans, 1437 · Scalability and partial connections in tackling antimicrobial resistance in West Africa. Jose A. Cañada, 1658 · Ontologies of resistance: Bacteria surveillance and the co-production of antimicrobial resistance. Nicolas Fortané, 184III : IDENTIFYING9 · Scenes from the many lives of Escherichia coli: A play in three acts. Mark Erickson and Catherine Will, 20710 · Micro-geographies of kombucha as methodology: A cross-cultural conversation. A.C. Davidson and Emma Ransom-Jones, 22811 · Pluribiosis and the never-ending microgeohistories. Charlotte Brives, 24712 · Old anthropology's acquaintance with human-microbial encounters: Interpretations and methods. Andrea Butcher, 268 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aWithout microbes, no other forms of life would be possible. But what does it mean to be with microbes? With Microbes sets microbes and the multiple ways they exist around, in and on humans at center stage. In this book, 24 social scientists and artists attune to microbes and describe their complicated relationships with humans and other beings. The book shows the multiplicity of these relationships and their dynamism, through detailed ethnographies of the relationships between humans, animals, plants, and microbes. Ethnographic explorations with fermented foods, waste, faecal matter, immunity, antimicrobial resistance, phages, as well as indigenous and scientific understandings of microbes challenge ideas of them being simple entities: not just pathogenic foes, old friends or good fermentation minions, but so much more. By describing these complex, dynamic, and ever-changing entanglements between humans and microbes, the chapters raise crucial points about how microbes are ‘known’ and how social scientists can study microbes with ethnographic methods, more often than not in the absence of microscopes, models, and computations. Following these various entanglements, the book tells how these relations transform both humans and microbes in the process. =536 \\$aFinnish Academy of Science and Letters$c316941 =536 \\$aFinnish Cultural Foundation$c0116947-3 =536 \\$aKone Foundation$c201906614 =536 \\$aKone Foundation$c201802186 =536 \\$aRegion Nouvelle-Aquitaine$c2018-1R40218 =536 \\$aWerner Siemens-Stiftung =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =653 \\$aScience and Technology Studies =700 1\$aBrives, Charlotte,$eeditor.$uCentre Emile Durkheim, French National Centre for Scientific Research.$0(orcid)0000000174590646$1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7459-0646 =700 1\$aSariola, Salla,$eeditor.$uUniversity of Helsinki.$0(orcid)0000000334017727$1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3401-7727 =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9781912729180$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/WithMicrobesThumb.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 03558nam 22003852 4500 =001 cc201ee7-8f10-4ee8-b182-1797b644b037 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20182018\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9780995527799$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9781912729005$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9780995527799$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSOC026000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC002000$2bisacsh =072 7$aPOL045000$2bisacsh =100 1\$aBrichet, Nathalia,$eauthor.$uUniversity of Copenhagen.$0(orcid)000000020833115X$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0833-115X =245 13$aAn Anthropology of Common Ground :$bAwkward Encounters in Heritage Work /$cNathalia Brichet. =264 \1$aManchester :$bMattering Press,$c2018. =264 \4$c©2018 =300 \\$a1 online resource (288 pages): $b25 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 7Acknowledgements 9Preface 13____Introduction: Collaboration and the Fruits of Awkward Relations, 191 · Crafting the Field of Common Heritage, 432 · Sharing Heritage Through Friction, 633 · Altering Heritage Through Mimesis, 1134 · Valuing Heritage Through the Fetish, 1535 · Qualifying Heritage Through Postcolonial Moments, 213Notes 261References 275 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aPaying attention to details and ‘small stories’ as that which make worlds (heritage projects as well as ethnography), the book proposes a kind of postcolonial scholarship. Rather than uncovering or building up one story about the Danish-Ghanaian past, the work insists on providing ‘inconclusive’ analyses, collaboratively generated in the course of the project work and in the process of writing ethnographically about it. The ambition is to nurture fieldwork as an opportunity for creating a common ground, on which to think about what heritage and ethnography could be. Common ground, then, is not only an ideal of the joint heritage project, but an expression of an anthropological ambition. In consequence, the book is an account of a particular ethnographic research project – the ‘methods story’ being about how post-colonial relations might be noticed and supported and about how empirical research is done as relations between what is going on in the field and the way that the ethnographer chooses to tell the story of the field in the text.The book is structured around four different approaches, following a ‘crafting the field’ chapter (in lieu of a ‘context’ chapter). Each provides a qualification of heritage and ethnography – as components of positively and collaboratively generating what these phenomena even are. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9780995527799$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/AOCG_front_433x650.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 06970nam 22004332 4500 =001 6852ffab-b996-4d80-a8c6-67be81eb9d20 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20202020\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9781912729012$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9781912729029$q(PDF) =020 \\$a9781912729043$q(HTML) =020 \\$a9781912729036$q(Epub) =024 7\$a10.28938/9781912729012$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSOC002000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC071000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC041000$2bisacsh =245 00$aBoxes :$bA Field Guide /$cedited by Susanne Bauer, Martina Schlünder, Maria Rentetzi. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2020. =264 \4$c©2020 =300 \\$a1 online resource (628 pages): $b150 illustrations, 1 table. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 9Contributors 16Boxing Practices 25Preface and Acknowledgements 26____Introductions1 · The Generative Possibilities of the Wrong Box. Martina Schlünder, 292 · The Epistemology of the Familiar: A Hymn to Pandora. Maria Rentetzi, 373 · Navigation Tools for Studying Boxes: A User's Manual. Susanne Bauer, 45I · TRAP4 · Inscribing the Soul: Cerebral Ventricles as Symbolic and Material Boxes. Jameson Kismet Bell, 555 · Better Shelter. Emily Brownell, 736 · Slide Box: How to Stock Some Thousand Cancer Cases. Ulrich Mechler, 937 · System Box (Tray) with Wasp. Tahani Nadim, 109II · JUKE8 · Thinking Inside the Box: The Construction of Knowledge in a Miniature Seventeenth-Century Cabinet. Stephanie Bowry, 1279 · Musical Instrument Boxes. Hidden Information: Cases for Musical Instruments and Their Functions. Beatrix Darmstädter, 14510 · Boxing Crickets: A Taxonomy of Containers for Singing and Fighting Ensifera. Martina Siebert, 157III · TIME11 · Contesting the Box: Museums and Repatriation. Stewart Allen, 16912 · Archaeology and Cigarettes: 'Ekphora' and 'Periphora' of the Archaeological Identity through Cigarette Packs. Styliana Galiniki and Eleftheria Akrivopoulou, 18713 · More than a Toy Box: Dandanah and the Sea of Stories. Artemis Yagou, 203IV · CARGO14 · The Ur-Box: Multispecies Take-off from Noah's Ark to Animal Air Cargo. Nils Güttler, Martina Schlünder, Susanne Bauer, 21515 · Parcels Render Neglected People Visible. Tanja Hammel, 23116 · Boxes, Infrastructure and the Materiality of Moral Relations: Aid and Respect after Cyclone Pam. Alexandra Widmer, 241V · BLACK17 · 'As Modern as Tomorrow': The Medicine Cabinet. Deanna Day, 25518 · The Green Minna: Transporting Police Detainees in Imperial Berlin. Eric J. Engstrom, 27119 · Scaling Up from the Bench: Fermentation Tank. Victoria Lee, 28920 · Deep Time History: The Lure of the Black Box. Dagmar Schäfer, 307 VI · TEXT21 · Panels and Frames: Toward a New Relationship between Text and Image in Academic Writing. Pit Arens and Martina Schlünder, 32722 · Analogue Privacy: The Paper Shredder as a Technology for Knowledge Destruction. Sarah Blacker, 365VII · ICE23 · Biobank Boxes: Technologies of Population. Susanne Bauer, 38124 · The Magic of Dropbox, its Virtuality and Materiality. Shih-Pei Chen, 397VIII · ANXIETY25 · Domestic Reservoirs: Managing Drinking Water in Taiwanese Households. Yi-Ping Cheng, 409 26 · Keep Calm and Carry One: The Civilian Gas Mask Case and its Containment of British Emotions. Mats Fridlund, 42527 · Cardboard Box: The Politics of Materiality. Maria Renetzi, 443IX · COUNT28 · Petri dish (boîte de Petri, Petrischale). Mathias de Grote, 459 29 · Prussian Census Box: Moving and Freezing Data. Christine von Oertzen, 47330 · Black-Boxing Knowledge: Glass Dosimeters and Governmental Control. Maria Rentetzi, 481X · MIRROR31 · The Mirror Trap. Etienne S. Benson, 493 32 · Shifting Medical Bottles: In Between Medical and Indigenous Worlds. Johanna Gonçalves Martín, 50533 · Guarding the Memory: Photographic Glass Plates Negatives' Boxes. Mirka Palioura, Spyridoula Pyrpili, Myrto Vouleli, 52534 · Lousy Research: The History of Typhus Vaccine Production, 1915 - 1945. Martina Schlünder, 539XI · TOOL35 · The Mechanic's Toolbox and Tool Chest: A Nexus of the Personal and the Social. Don Duprez, 559 36 · Surgeons' Chests from the Mary Rose. Hanako Endo, 57137 · Ruminations on an Electrotherapeutic Box. Jan Eric Olsén, 58338 · Reliquary: A Box for a Relic. Lucy Razzall, 59739 · The Research Box. Bonnie Mak and Julia Pollack, 607 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aA book full of boxes. A box in itself. An unboxing. This book explores boxes in their broadest sense and size. It invites us to step into the field, unravel how and why things are contained and how it might be otherwise. By turning the focus of Science and Technology Studies (STS) to boxing practices, this collation of essays examines boxes as world-making devices.Gathered in the format of a field guide, it offers an introduction to ways of ordering the world, unpacking their boxed-up, largely invisible politics and epistemics. Performatively, pushing against conventional uses of academic books, this volume is about rethinking taken-for-granted formats and infrastructures of scholarly ordering – thinking, writing, reading. It diverges from encyclopedic logics and representative overviews of boxing practices and the architectural organization of monographs and edited volumes through a single, overarching argument.This book asks its users to leave well-trodden paths of linear and comprehensive reading and invites them to read sideways, creating their own orders through associations and relating. Thus, this book is best understood as an intervention, a beginning, an open box, a slim volume that needs expansion and further experiments with ordering by its users. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =700 1\$aBauer, Susanne,$eeditor.$uUniversity of Oslo. =700 1\$aSchlünder, Martina,$eeditor.$uMax Planck Institute for the History of Science. =700 1\$aRentetzi, Maria,$eeditor.$uTechnical University of Berlin.$0(orcid)0000000219408116$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1940-8116 =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9781912729012$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Boxes_cover_thumb.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 05433nam 22004692 4500 =001 2c647e88-873b-42c3-bdbd-52162bd9aaf8 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20182018\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9780995527720$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9780995527737$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9780995527720$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aDES000000$2bisacsh =072 7$aTEC016020$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC026040$2bisacsh =100 1\$aBoucher, Andy,$eauthor.$uGoldsmiths University of London.$0(orcid)0000000242267059$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4226-7059 =245 10$aEnergy Babble /$cAndy Boucher, Bill Gaver, Tobie Kerridge, Mike Michael, Katherine Moline, Liliana Ovalle, Matthew Plummer-Fernandez, Alex Wilkie. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2018. =264 \4$c©2018 =300 \\$a1 online resource (152 pages): $b240 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aPreface 7Introducing the project: Entangling speculation, design, and STS 10____Framing, 13· A prehistory. Mike Michael, 14· Project identity, 16· Fieldwork, 17· A workshop, 28· Cultural probes, 32· My energy monitor: Chronicle of a failed attempt. Liliana Ovalle, 36· Rescripting monitors, 38Designing, 41· Workbooks, 42· That's not my name. Bill Gaver, 46· Brief, 48· Why an 'Energy Babble'? Gill Gaver, 50· Design and development, 51· Hardware, 52· Sound, 55· Sound design. Alex Wilkie, 56· Software, 61· Babblebot stories. Matthew Plummer-Fernandez, 62· Form, 66· Shaping the Energy Babble. Liliana Ovalle, 68· Production, 74· The microphone and the algorithm. Andy Boucher, 79· Studios, problems, publics. Alex Wilkie, 90Circulating, 99· Deploying, 100· 'Engaging with' and 'engaged by': Publics and communities, design, and sociology. Tobie Kerridge and Mike Michael, 103· Using, 111· Design and Science & Technology Studies. Mike Michael, 115· Community as a state of mind. Liliana Ovalle, 126· Engaging with the community, 128· Living with the Energy Babble. Bill Gaver, 129· Exhibiting and engaging, 134· Three years of living with an Energy Babble. Katherine Moline, 136· The stuff of method: Open things and closed objects. Mike Michael, 141Afterword, 148 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aThis is the story of a set of computational devices called Energy Babbles. The product of a collaboration between designers and STS researchers, Energy Babbles are like automated talk radios obsessed with energy. Synthesised voices, punctuated by occasional jingles, recount energy policy announcements, remarks about energy conservation made on social media, information about current energy demand and production, and comments entered by other Babble users.Developed for members of UK community groups working to promote sustainable energy practices, the Energy Babbles were designed to reflect the complex situations they navigate, to provide information and encourage communication, and to help shed light on their engagements with energy policy and practice. This book tells the story of the Babbles from a mix of design and STS perspectives, suggesting how design may benefit from the perspectives of STS, and how STS may take an interventionist, design-led approach to the study of emerging technological issues.ChaptersEnergy Babble is organised into three main sections – Framing, Designing, and Circulating – that trace the story of how a team of design and STS researchers made and deployed a set of computational devices to UK–based community groups. The book is introduced by way of a preface and introduction and contains subsections that describe the various ways in which the research into local energy practices was conducted. Katherine Moline provides a reflection on her three-year experience of curating exhibitions that features the Energy Babble device and the book comes to a close with an Afterword by Bill Gaver. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =700 1\$aGaver, Bill,$eauthor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =700 1\$aKerridge, Tobie,$eauthor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =700 1\$aMichael, Mike,$eauthor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =700 1\$aMoline, Katherine,$eauthor.$uGoldsmiths University of London.$0(orcid)0000000169739784$1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6973-9784 =700 1\$aOvalle, Liliana,$eauthor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =700 1\$aPlummer-Fernandez, Matthew,$eauthor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =700 1\$aWilkie, Alex,$eauthor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9780995527720$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/EnergyBabble_small.jpeg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 03728nam 22004212 4500 =001 95e15115-4009-4cb0-8824-011038e3c116 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20212021\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9781912729081$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9781912729098$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9781912729098$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSCI024000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC071000$2bisacsh =245 00$aEnergy Worlds in Experiment /$cedited by James Maguire, Laura Watts, Brit Ross Winthereik. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2021. =264 \4$c©2021 =300 \\$a1 online resource (1-213 pages): $b27 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 7Contributors 9Acknowledgements 15Foreword: Setting the scene 17____1 · Introduction. James Maguire, Laura Watts and Brit Ross Winthereik, 212 · The power of stories. Ann-Sofie Kall, Rebecca Ford and Lea Schick, 343 · Propositional politics. Endre Dányi and Michaela Spencer, James Maguire, Hannah Knox, Andrea Ballestero, 664 · Five theses on energy polities. Brit Ross Winthereik, Stefan Helmreich, Damian O’Doherty, Mónica Amador-Jiménez, Noortje Marres, 955 · Unda: A graphic novel of energy encounters. Laura Watts, Cymene Howe, Geoffrey C. Bowker, with art by Neil Ford,lettering by Rob Jones, 1196 · An energy experiment: Tests, trials and ElectroTrumps. Jamie Cross, Simone Abram, 1527 · Interview: The anthropology of energy, Dominic Boyer interviewed by James Maguire, 1948 · Conclusion. James Maguire, Laura Watts and Brit Ross Winthereik, 209 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aEnergy Worlds in Experiment is an experiment in writing about energy and an exploration of energy infrastructures as experiments. Twenty authors have written collaborative chapters that examine energy politics and practices, from electricity cables and energy monitors to swamps and estuaries. Each chapter proposes a unique format to tell energy worlds differently and to stimulate energy imaginaries: thesis, propositions, interviews, stories, card games, and a graphic novel. The book offers practitioners, students, and scholars a range of new tools to help think, engage and critique energy politics, practices and infrastructures. =536 \\$aThe Danish Independent Research Council$c0602-02551B$eFSE$fMarine Renewable Energy as Alien =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =653 \\$aSOC002010 =700 1\$aMaguire, James,$eeditor.$uIT University of Copenhagen.$0(orcid)0000000150811811$1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5081-1811 =700 1\$aWatts, Laura,$eeditor.$uUniversity of Edinburgh.$0(orcid)0000000198397939$1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9839-7939 =700 0\$aBrit Ross Winthereik,$eeditor.$uIT University of Copenhagen.$0(orcid)0000000218372385$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1837-2385 =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9781912729098$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/energy_worlds_cover_thumb.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 05169nam 22004572 4500 =001 91917b2d-ac8c-4a33-bb29-305f97241c4d =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20212021\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9781912729142$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9781912729159$q(PDF) =020 \\$a9781912729173$q(HTML) =020 \\$a9781912729166$q(Epub) =024 7\$a10.28938/9781912729142$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSOC002000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC026000$2bisacsh =072 7$aPOL000000$2bisacsh =072 7$aPSY000000$2bisacsh =245 00$aEnvironmental Alterities /$cedited by Cristóbal Bonelli, Antonia Walford. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2021. =264 \4$c©2021 =300 \\$a1 online resource (248 pages): $b3 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 7Contributors 8Acknowledgements 12Introduction: Environmental alterities. Cristóbal Bonelli and Antonia Walford, 13SECTION 1: SEASThe woman who shed her skin: Towards a humble anthropocentrism in the Outer Hebrides. Magnus Course, 45Visits from octopus and crocodile kin: rethinking human-sea relations through amphibious twinship in Indonesia. Annet Pauwelussen, 69Environmental infrastructural alterities and communicative possibilities. A conversation between Penny Harvey and Stefan Helmreich, 95SECTION 2: FORESTSThe non-relational forest: Trees, oil palms and the limits to relational ontology in lowland Ecuador. Stine Krøijer, 117Thinking in forests. Lys Alcayna-Stevens, 138Easy gesturing or inventing politics? A conversation between Marisol de la Cadena and Casper Bruun Jensen, 161SECTION 3: COLLECTIVITIESTo live and learn. Notes on alterity and togetherness, or: On living with dogs. Marianne de Laet, 185Planetary alterity, solar cosmopolitics and the Parliament of Planets. Bronislaw Szerszynski, 204Relating to resistances, curating antagonisms. A conversation between Dehlia Hannah and Manuel Tironi, 227 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aIn the context of accelerating environmental crises and exhausted intellectual paradigms, this book asks what comes after ‘after nature’. Instead of demanding new models and approaches, it invites its readers to look to the endpoints and failures of what is already known, in order to generate alternative forms of ethical engagement with worlds both on this planet, and beyond it. Drawing together scholarship from across science and technology studies, philosophy, and anthropology and bringing it into conversation with rich ethnographic and empirical material, the book asks how we might potentialise the contradictions and oppositions of critical social scientific thinking in order to develop a mode of paradoxical engagement that is in constant movement between knowledge and its edges, practices and their limits, and which allows us to relate to that which is excessive to relations and relationality.The chapters in the book range across very different empirical settings and communities of people, from fishermen in the Scottish seas, the sea folk of Indonesian archipelagos, indigenous peoples in forests in Lowland Ecuador, primatologists in the jungle of DR Congo, the personal and domestic space of living with dogs and the cosmological scale of planetary interactions. Each chapter explores different modes of environmental relationality and alterity by grappling with the spaces in-between – the contradictions, uncertainties, limits, excesses and liminalities which make up people’s everyday relations with their environments. The chapters are accompanied by in-depth conversations between scholars who frankly discuss the proposals of the book and the arguments of each chapter, with a view to inviting further reflection and discussion amongst the book’s readers. As the chapters and conversations in this book show, admitting that we still do not know what the environment is, even in times of crisis, can be a form of hopeful, humble environmental politics. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =653 \\$aEnvironmental Politics =653 \\$aScience and Technology Studies =700 1\$aBonelli, Cristóbal,$eeditor.$0(orcid)0000000181090789$1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8109-0789 =700 1\$aWalford, Antonia,$eeditor. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9781912729142$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/EnvironmentalAlteritiesThumb.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 04791nam 22003732 4500 =001 89aef935-5c74-48b5-9874-6182202d8d46 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20182018\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9780995527775$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9780995527782$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9780995527775$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSOC026000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC026040$2bisacsh =100 1\$aSismondo, Sergio,$eauthor.$uQueens University.$0(orcid)0000000246358142$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4635-8142 =245 10$aGhost-Managed Medicine :$bBig Pharma’s Invisible Hands /$cSergio Sismondo. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2018. =264 \4$c©2018 =300 \\$a1 online resource (152 pages): $b8 illustrations, 2 tables. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 6____1 · Power and Knowledge in Drug Marketing, 72 · Data Extraction at the Margins of Health, 403 · Ghosts in the Machine: Publication Planning 101, 644 · Hosts and Guests in the Haunted House, 915 · Possession: Making and Managing Key Opinion Leaders, 1106 · Draining and Constraining Agency, 1397 · Sirens of Hope, Trolls of Fury and Other Vocal Creatures, 1618 · Conclusion: The Haunted Pharmakon, 177Acknowledgements, 191Notes, 195 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aGhost-Managed Medicine by Sergio Sismondo explores a spectral side of medical knowledge, based in pharmaceutical industry tactics and practices.Hidden from the public view, the many invisible hands of the pharmaceutical industry and its agents channel streams of drug information and knowledge from contract research organizations (that extract data from experimental bodies) to publication planners (who produce ghostwritten medical journal articles) to key opinion leaders (who are sent out to educate physicians about drugs) to patient advocacy organizations (who ventriloquize views on diseases, treatments and regulations), and onward. The goal of this ‘assemblage marketing’ is to establish conditions that make specific diagnoses, prescriptions and purchases as obvious and frequent as possible. While staying in the shadows, companies create powerful markets in which increasing numbers of people become sick and the drugs largely sell themselves.Most agents for drug companies aim to tell the truth, but the truths they tell are drawn from streams of knowledge that have been fed, channeled and maintained by the companies at every possible opportunity. Especially because those companies have concentrated influence and narrow interests, consumers and others should be concerned about how epistemic power is distributed – or ‘political economies of knowledge’ – and not just about truth and falsity of medical knowledge.In pharmaceutical companies’ ideal worlds, medical research, education and marketing would be tightly fused. Doctors trying to educate themselves would turn to companies’ agents, such as researchers and educators sponsored to spread particular messages, local sales reps hired to change doctors’ behaviour, or journalists supplied with news stories. Ghost-Managed Medicine shows that the real world of medicine is not very far from the worlds that the companies want to create. Big Pharma’s many invisible hands are busy throughout medicine, and medicine changes as a result.Ghost-Managed Medicine draws on presentations at industry conferences, especially ones where pharmaceutical companies interact with communication, marketing and other agencies. Participants at these interface conferences describe goals, practices and concerns; in the process, they reveal a lot about how the industry works. Some of the book’s other data is taken from publications that also serve as interfaces between the industry and adjacent actors, and from interviews with people engaged in pharmaceutical marketing. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9780995527775$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/GMM_front_433x650.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 04337nam 22003852 4500 =001 1f4a0ad0-d8b8-4e10-bfb7-588a9b69c303 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20162016\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9780993144967$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9780993144974$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9780993144967$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aEDU037000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC019000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC026000$2bisacsh =100 1\$aMacknight, Vicki,$eauthor.$uUniversity of Otago. =245 10$aImagining Classrooms :$bStories of children, teaching, and ethnography /$cVicki Macknight. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2016. =264 \4$c©2016 =300 \\$a1 online resource (202 pages): $b10 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aPreface · On Losing Foundations 9 Acknowledgements 13Introduction 15____PART ONE · IMAGINATION IN SOCIAL SCIENCE PRACTICE1 · Imagining Classrooms, 332 · Defining Imagination in Practice, 563 · Imagination and Theory Building, 69PART TWO · IMAGINATION IN CLASSROOM PRACTICE4 · Pictures in the Mind. A Steiner Classroom and Representational Imagination, 935 · Telling a Good Yarn. An Independent Classroom and the Imagination that Transforms, 1106 · Thinking of Otherness. A Government Classroom and Reading Intention, 1267 · Having a Friend. A Special Classroom and the Making of Relationships, 145CONCLUSION · DOING THE RELATIONALImagining Connections and Separations, 164Afterword, 184Bibliography, 191 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aIn this book we go to five Australian classrooms, bustling with nine- and ten-year-old children. In each classroom, imaginations are being done, not just in minds, but with bodies too, using materials and words, laughter and ideas. Each classroom is part of a different type of school: a Waldorf/Steiner school, an exclusive private school, a middle-class government school, a diverse catholic school, and a school for intellectually disabled ‘special’ children. And at these five schools, we see imagination being done — to represent, to transform, to empathise, to work with others, and to think.The book’s characters are children and teachers, with teachers working through the school day to give children the skills they will need to think, to think with and about others, and to be creative. What we notice are habits of imagining being instilled and these range from getting children to close their eyes and imagine accurate representations, through to getting them to imagine how others feel, to getting children to make new connections between thoughts and feelings. We wonder about the implications of these habits for good knowing and good doing.At the same time, the book shines a critical lens onto the imaginative practices of ethnographers and participant-observers, to help us think about how we define, how we class, and how we analyse our data. Ethnographers, too, have habits of imagining, representing, empathising, and connecting, and noticing these habits can help us do them better. How are academic practices both material and imaginative? How might we make sure our work is both as accurate and as ethical as possible? Macknight argues that imagination is not just something hidden in minds — it is something we do. This, then, is a book about how to do imagination better for thinking, for making, and for living together. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9780993144967$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Imagining_classrooms_hr.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 04346nam 22004092 4500 =001 091abd14-7bc0-4fe7-8194-552edb02b98b =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20182018\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9780995527751$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9780995527768$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9780995527768$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSOC026000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC026040$2bisacsh =072 7$aDES000000$2bisacsh =245 00$aInventing the Social /$cedited by Noortje Marres, Michael Guggenheim, Alex Wilkie. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2018. =264 \4$c©2018 =300 \\$a1 online resource (1-334 pages): $b58 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$a1. Introduction: From Performance to Inventing the SocialNoortje Marres, Michael Guggenheim, Alex WilkieSECTION ONE: PROJECTS2. Inviting Atmospheres to the Architecture TableNerea Calvillo3. Incubations: Inventing Preventive AssemblagesMichael Guggenheim, Bernd Kräftner, Judith Kröll4. Turning Controversies into Questions of Design: Prototyping Alternative Metrics for Heathrow AirportChristian Nold5. Designing and Doing: Enacting Energy-and-CommunityAlex Wilkie, Mike Michael6. Outing Mies’ Basement: Designs to Recompose the Barcelona Pavilion’s SocietiesAndrés JaqueSECTION TWO: ESSAYS7. Earth, Fire, Art: Pyrotechnology and the Crafting of the SocialNigel Clark8. How to Spot the Behavioural Shibboleth and What to Do About ItFabian Muniesa9. The Social and its Problems: On Problematic SociologyMartin Savransky10. The Sociality of Infectious DiseasesMarsha Rosengarten11. Social Media as Experiments in SocialityNoortje Marres, Carolin GerlitzCOMMENTARIES12. Hacking the Social?Christopher M. Kelty13. How Can We…? Connecting Inventive Social Research with Social and Government InnovationLucy KimbellAPPENDIX14. Inventive Tensions: A ConversationLucy Kimbell, Michael Guggenheim, Noortje Marres, Alex Wilkie =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aInventing the Social, edited by Noortje Marres, Michael Guggenheim and Alex Wilkie, showcases recent efforts to develop new ways of knowing society that combine social research with creative practice. With contributions from leading figures in sociology, architecture, geography, design, anthropology, and digital media, the book provides practical and conceptual pointers on how to move beyond the customary distinctions between knowledge and art, and on how to connect the doing, researching and making of social life in potentially new ways.Presenting concrete projects with a creative approach to researching social life as well as reflections on the wider contexts from which these projects emerge, this collection shows how collaboration across social science, digital media and the arts opens up timely alternatives to narrow, instrumentalist proposals that seek to engineer behaviour and to design community from scratch. To invent the social is to recognise that social life is always already creative in itself and to take this as a starting point for developing different ways of combining representation and intervention in social life. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =700 1\$aMarres, Noortje,$eeditor.$uUniversity of Warwick.$0(orcid)0000000282376946$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8237-6946 =700 1\$aGuggenheim, Michael,$eeditor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =700 1\$aWilkie, Alex,$eeditor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9780995527768$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/ITS-front-433x650.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 04167nam 22003972 4500 =001 e1af2b0d-06a2-4c79-8b11-7a1e08e5f41e =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20162016\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9780993144981$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9780993144998$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9780993144981$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aART015090$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC019000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC026000$2bisacsh =245 00$aModes of Knowing :$bResources from the Baroque /$cedited by John Law, Evelyn Ruppert. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2016. =264 \4$c©2016 =300 \\$a1 online resource (268 pages): $b46 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 7Contributors 11Acknowledgements 15____1 · Modes of Knowing: Resources from the Baroque. John Law, 17PART ONE: REFLECTION ON THE BAROQUE2 · On Exceeding Baroque Excess: An Exploration through a Participatory Community Workshop. Mario Blaser, 593 · Fallacy of the Work, Truth of the Performance: What Makes Music Baroque: Historical Authenticity or Ontological Plurality? Antoine Hennion, 844 · Distributive Numbers: A Post-demographic Perspective on Probability. Adrian Mackenzie, 1155 · A Baroque Sensibility for Big Data Visualisations. Evelyn Ruppert, 136PART TWO: EXPERIMENTING WITH BAROQUE6 · Baroque as Tension: Introducing Turmoil and Turbulence in the Academic Text. Mattijs van de Port, 1657 · Innovation with Words and Visuals: A Baroque Sensibility. Helen Verran and Brit Ross Winthereik, 1978 · London Stone Redux. Hugh Raffles, 2249 · Clafoutis as a Composite: On Hanging Together Felicitously. Annemarie Mol, 242 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aHow might we think differently? This book is an attempt to respond to this question. Its contributors are all interested in non-standard modes of knowing. They are all more or less uneasy with the restrictions or the agendas implied by academic modes of knowing, and they have chosen to do this by working with, through, or against one important Western alternative — that of the baroque.Why the baroque? One answer is that the baroque made space for and fostered many forms of otherness. It involved knowing things differently, extravagantly, excessively, and in materially heterogeneous ways, and it apprehended that which is other and could not be caught in a cognitive or symbolic net. It also involved knowing in ways that did not gather into a single point and knew itself to be performative. As part of a great Western division between rationalist and non-rationalist modes of knowing, the baroque is therefore a possible resource for creating ways of knowing differently — a storehouse of possible alternative techniques. To say this is not to say that it is the right mode of knowing. The book’s authors do not seek to create a ‘baroque social science’ whatever that might be, but instead work in a range of ways to explore how drawing on the ‘resources of the baroque’ can help us to think differently. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =700 1\$aLaw, John,$eeditor.$uThe Open University. =700 1\$aRuppert, Evelyn,$eeditor.$uGoldsmiths University of London.$0(orcid)0000000177811491$1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7781-1491 =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9780993144981$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Modes_of_knowing_hr.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 04061nam 22003852 4500 =001 0573507d-a5c8-4199-8b23-6b1131f36934 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20162016\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9780995527706$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9780995527713$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9780995527706$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =041 1\$aeng$hfre =072 7$aBUS043060$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC026040$2bisacsh =100 1\$aCochoy, Frank,$eauthor.$uUniversity of Toulouse-Jean Jaurès.$0(orcid)0000000203825660$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0382-5660 =245 10$aOn Curiosity :$bThe Art of Market Seduction /$cFrank Cochoy. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2016. =264 \4$c©2016 =300 \\$a1 online resource (256 pages): $b25 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 7Acknowledgements 9Teaser 11____1 · From Eve to Bluebeard: The Difficult Secularisation of Curiosity, 172 · Bluebeard: Towards the Marketisation of Curiosity, 353 · 'Peep shop'? An Anthropology of Window Displays, 54The Effects of Locks, 58The Effects of Mirrors, 764 · 'Teasing', 99Packaging (Teasing, Scene 1), 100Advertising (Teasing, Scene 2), 111Continually Agitating Curiosity, or How to Lead a Consumer towards Wonderland, 141Data Matrix, 1495 · 'Closer', 157Door-closer, 161Closer, 169Appendix · Bluebeard, 205Notes, 211Bibliography, 237 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aWhat draws us towards a shop window display? What drives us to grab a special offer, to enter the privileged circle of premium newspaper subscribers, to peruse the pages of an enticing magazine? Without doubt, it is curiosity — that essential force of everyday action which invites us to break from our habits and to become transported beyond our very selves.Curiosity (whether healthy or unhealthy) is one of the favourite tricks of market seduction. Capturing a public — attracting the attention of a reader, seducing a customer, meeting the expectations of a user, persuading a voter … — often requires the construction of a set of technical devices that can play upon people’s inner motivations.Cochoy invites us to take a sociological trip into these cabinets of curiosity, accompanied throughout by Bluebeard, a fairy tale that is both a model of the genre and a pure curiosity machine. At once a work of history and economic anthropology, the book meticulously analyses the devices designed by markets to arouse, excite, and sustain curiosity: a window display, practices of ‘teasing’, packaging, bus shelters, mobile internet technologies… In the Bettencourt and Strauss-Kahn affairs and the Wikileaks controversy, Cochoy also uncovers the work of investigative journalism and its attention-grabbing ‘scoops’, revealing the secrets of the revealers of secrets.Available in English for the first time, this major work will arouse readers’ curiosity over the course of its unusual and colourful journey. By the end, now better informed and more cautious, they will be able to identify the traps of which they are the target. So long as curiosity is kept at bay, at least! =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9780995527706$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/On_curiosity_hr.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 04740nam 22003972 4500 =001 ef825a4b-82f7-4fe9-8906-ce6146985d21 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20162016\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9780993144943$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9780993144950$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9780993144943$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aSOC019000$2bisacsh =072 7$aSOC026040$2bisacsh =245 00$aPractising Comparison :$bLogics, Relations, Collaborations /$cedited by Joe Deville, Michael Guggenheim, Zuzana Hrdličková. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2016. =264 \4$c©2016 =300 \\$a1 online resource (324 pages): $b10 illustrations, 1 table. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aList of Figures 7Contributors 9Acknowledgements 15____1 · Introduction: The Practices and Infrastructures of Comparison. Joe Deville, Michael Guggenheim and Zuzana Hrdličková, 17SECTION ONE: LOGICS2 · Comparative Research: Beyond Linear-causal Explanation. Monika Krause, 453 · Cross Comparison: Comparisons across Architectural Displays of Colonial Power. Alice Santiago Faria, 68SECTION TWO: COLLABORATIONS4 · Same, Same but Different: Provoking Relations, Assembling the Comparator. Joe Deville, Michael Guggenheim and Zuzana Hrdličková, 995 · Pulling Oneself Out of the Traps of Comparison: An Auto-ethnography of a European Project. Madeleine Akrich and Vololona Rabeharisoa, 1306 · Frame Against the Grain: Asymmetries, Interference, and the Politics of EU Comparison. Tereza Stöckelová, 166SECTION THREE: RELATIONS7 · Lateral Comparisons. Christopher Gad and Casper Bruun Jensen, 189 8 · Comparative Tinkering with Care Moves. Peter A. Lutz, 2209 · Comparing Comparisons: On Rankings and Accounting in Hospitals and Universities. Sarah de Rijcke, Iris Wallenburg, Paul Wouters and Roland Ball, 25110 · Steve Jobs, Terrorists, Gentlemen, and Punks: Tracing Strange Comparisons of Biohackers. Morgan Meyer, 28111 · Afterword: Spaces of Comparison. Jennifer Robinson, 306 =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aThis book compares things, objects, concepts, and ideas. It is also about the practical acts of doing comparison. Comparison is not something that exists in the world, but a particular kind of activity.Agents of various kinds compare by placing things next to one another, by using software programs and other tools, and by simply looking in certain ways. Comparing like this is an everyday practice. But in the social sciences, comparing often becomes more burdensome, more complex, and more questions are asked of it.How, then, do social scientists compare? What role do funders, their tools, and databases play in social scientific comparisons? Which sorts of objects do they choose to compare and how do they decide which comparisons are meaningful? Doing comparison in the social sciences, it emerges, is a practice weighed down by a history in which comparison was seen as problematic. As it plays out in the present, this history encounters a range of other agents also involved in doing comparison who may challenge the comparisons of social scientists themselves.This book introduces these questions through a varied range of reports, auto-ethnographies, and theoretical interventions that compare and analyse these different and often intersecting comparisons. Its goal is to begin a move away from the critique of comparison and towards a better comparative practice, guided not by abstract principles, but a deeper understanding of the challenges of practising comparison. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =700 1\$aDeville, Joe,$eeditor.$uLancaster University.$0(orcid)0000000305833493$1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0583-3493 =700 1\$aGuggenheim, Michael,$eeditor.$uGoldsmiths University of London. =700 1\$aHrdličková, Zuzana,$eeditor. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9780993144943$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Practising_comparison_hr.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License =LDR 04573nam 22004932 4500 =001 60f93b71-e6ce-4507-8038-3c7ca049eb35 =006 m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ =007 cr\\n\\\\\\\\\ =008 240516t20212021\\\\\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d =020 \\$z9781912729104$q(Paperback) =020 \\$a9781912729111$q(PDF) =024 7\$a10.28938/9781912729111$2doi =040 \\$aUkCbTOM$beng$elocal =072 7$aJBF$2thema =072 7$aJBFV$2thema =072 7$aJHB$2thema =245 00$aSensing In/Security :$bSensors as Transnational Security Infrastructures /$cedited by Nina Klimburg-Witjes, Nikolaus Poechhacker, Geoffrey C. Bowker. =264 \1$aManchester, UK :$bMattering Press,$c2021. =264 \4$c©2021 =300 \\$a1 online resource (312 pages): $b30 illustrations. =336 \\$atext$btxt$2rdacontent =337 \\$acomputer$bc$2rdamedia =338 \\$aonline resource$bcr$2rdacarrier =500 \\$aAvailable through Mattering Press. =505 0\$aForeword. Lucy Suchman.1. Sensing in/securities: An introduction. Nina Klimburg-Witjes, Nikolaus Poechhacker and Geoffrey C. Bowker.2. Microclimates of (in)security in Santiago: Sensors, sensing and sensations. Martin Tironi and Matías Valderrama.3. Smart cities, smart borders: Sensing networks and security in the urban space. Ilia Antenucci. 4. Sensing Salmonella: Modes of sensing and the politics of sensing infrastructures. Francis Lee. 5. Human sensing infrastructures and global public health security in India’s Million Death Study. Erik Aarden. 6. Expanding technosecurity culture: On wild cards, imagination and disaster prevention. Jutta Weber. 7. Visual Vignette I. Parasitic Surveillance: Mobile Security Vulnerability. Evan Light, Fenwick McKelvey and Rachel Douglas-Jones. 8. Visual Vignette II. A Tail of Breadcrumbs. Chris Wood. 9. Visual Vignette III. Human Sensors. Katja Mayer and El Iblis Shah. 10. Visual Vignettes IV. Mascha Gugganig and Rachel Douglas-Jones.11. Drones as political machines: Technocratic governance in Canadian drone space. Ciara Bracken-Roche.12. Sensing European alterity: An analogy between sensors and Hotspots in transnational security networks. Annalisa Pelizza and Wouter Van Rossem. 13. Sensing data centres. A.R.E. Taylor and Julia Velkova. 14. Hacking satellites. Jan-H. Passoth, Geoffrey C. Bowker, Nina Klimburg-Witjes and Godert-Jan van Manen. =506 0\$aOpen Access$fUnrestricted online access$2star =520 \\$aSensing In/Security: Sensors as Transnational Security Infrastructures investigates how sensors and sensing practices enact regimes of security and insecurity. It extends long-standing concerns with infrastructuring to emergent modes of surveillance and control by exploring how digitally networked sensors shape securitisation practices. Contributions in this volume examine how sensing devices gain political and epistemic relevance in various forms of in/security, from border control, regulation, and epidemiological tracking, to aerial surveillance and hacking. Instead of focusing on specific sensory devices and their consequences, this volume explores the complex and sometimes invisible political, cultural and ethical processes of infrastructuring in/security. =538 \\$aMode of access: World Wide Web. =540 \\$aThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For more detailed information consult the publisher's website.$uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ =588 0\$aMetadata licensed under CC0 Public Domain Dedication. =653 \\$aCritical Security Studies =653 \\$aScience and Technology Studies =653 \\$aSecuritisation practices =653 \\$aSensors =653 \\$aSurveillance =653 \\$aTransnational Security Infrastructures =700 1\$aKlimburg-Witjes, Nina,$eeditor.$uUniversity of Vienna.$0(orcid)0000000305838788$1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0583-8788 =700 1\$aPoechhacker, Nikolaus,$eeditor.$uUniversity of Graz.$0(orcid)0000000269282099$1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6928-2099 =700 1\$aBowker, Geoffrey C.,$eeditor.$uUniversity of California, Irvine. =700 1\$aSuchman, Lucy,$eforeword by.$uLancaster University. =710 2\$aMattering Press,$epublisher. =856 40$uhttps://doi.org/10.28938/9781912729111$zConnect to e-book =856 42$uhttps://www.matteringpress.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/sensing_insecurity_cover_thumb-1.jpg$zConnect to cover image =856 42$uhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/$zCC0 Metadata License