ABSTRACT

Digitalization and computerization are now pervasive in science. This has deep consequences for our understanding of scientific knowledge and of the scientific process, and challenges longstanding assumptions and traditional frameworks of thinking of scientific knowledge. Digital media and computational processes challenge our conception of the way in which perception and cognition work in science, of the objectivity of science, and the nature of scientific objects. They bring about new relationships between science, art and other visual media, and new ways of practicing science and organizing scientific work, especially as new visual media are being adopted by science studies scholars in their own practice. This volume reflects on how scientists use images in the computerization age, and how digital technologies are affecting the study of science.

part I|177 pages

Visualization in the Age of Computerization

chapter 2|19 pages

From Spade-Work to Screen-Work

New Forms of Archaeological Discovery in Digital Space

chapter 3|18 pages

British Columbia Mapped

Geology, Indigeneity and Land in the Age of Digital Cartography

chapter 4|20 pages

Redistributing Representational Work

Tracing a Material Multidisciplinary Link

chapter 5|21 pages

Making the Strange Familiar

Nanotechnology Images and Their Imagined Futures

chapter 8|24 pages

A Four-Dimensional Cinema

Computer Graphics, Higher Dimensions and the Geometrical Imagination

part II|74 pages

Doing Visual Work in Science Studies

chapter 9|29 pages

Visual STS

chapter 11|6 pages

Mapping Networks

Learning From the Epistemology of the “Natives”

chapter 13|26 pages

Visual Science Studies

Always Already Materialist