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Practices of Brokering: Between STS and Feminist Engineering Education ResearchBeddoes, Kacey 05 January 2012 (has links)
This project documents my efforts to publish STS- and gender theory-informed articles in engineering education journals. It analyzes the processes of writing and revising three articles submitted to three different journals, aiming to shed light on the field of engineering education, gender research therein, and contribute to feminist science studies literature on the challenges and opportunities of interdisciplinary work across women's studies and STEM fields. Building upon Wenger's concept of brokering, I analyze how I brought previously underexplored STS and feminist theory literature into engineering education journals. In producing this dissertation, I aim to illuminate some of the efforts and challenges of bringing STS and Women's Studies (WS) topics into engineering education journals – thus producing an account of brokering practices and an example of scalable scholarship.
The first chapter introduces engineering education research (EER) as a field of inquiry, situates my project with respect to current feminist science studies, summarizes the framework of brokering that informs my analyses, and describes my methodology. The second chapter describes my initial attempts at brokering by identifying and bridging differences and the preliminary brokering practices that emerged through writing and revising the first of my three articles. It discusses an article published in Journal of Engineering Education that analyzes the uses of feminist theory in EER and argues that further engagement with a broader range of feminist theories could benefit EER. The third chapter describes how some of these practices were reinforced, but also supplemented, while writing and revising the second article. It discusses an article published in International Journal of Engineering Education that analyzes problematizations of underrepresentation in EER and argues that further reflection upon and formal discussion of how underrepresentation is framed could benefit EER. The forth chapter describes how the established brokering practices guided writing the third article, making the process easier as I had become more comfortable with the requirements and challenges of brokering. It discusses an article submitted to European Journal of Engineering Education that analyzes feminist research methodologies in the context of EER, using data from interviews with feminist engineering educators. The fifth chapter concludes by summarizing the brokering practices and discussing their respective challenges, discussing the implications of this project for STS and WS, and, finally, by discussing other implications for peer review engineering education. The Appendix contains aims, scope, author guidelines, and review criteria for the three journals.
Chapters 2, 3, and 4 each begin with a narrative recounting of the practices of brokering that went into producing and revising each article. The narratives describe processes of writing and preparing to submit the articles, reviews received, and subsequent revision processes. The published or submitted articles appear after the brokering narrative. / Ph. D.
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Entangled Bodies: Tracing the Marks of History in Contemporary Science FictionSutton, Summer 01 January 2018 (has links)
Chapter one, “Narrating Entanglement: Posthuman Agency and Subjectivity in Shane Carruth’s Filmography,” considers the resonances of independent filmmaker Shane Carruth’s two SF films, Primer (2004) and Upstream Color (2013) with the ethos of quantum entanglement through close-readings of Primer’s anti-individualistic portrayal of scientific invention and Upstream Color’s metaphorically entangled human-pig character system. Chapter two, “Race and Schrödingers’s Legacy: History is Both Alive and Dead in Hari Kunzru’s White Tears” analyzes the 2017 novel White Tears as a narrative figuration of of the political, racial, and cultural entanglements set in motion by the economic structure of slavery, ultimately arguing that Kunzru’s entangled plotlines and histories critique the entanglement of contemporary U.S. capitalism with its past and present exploitation of black bodies. The third and final chapter, “Problem Child: Untangling the Reproduction Narrative in Lai and Phang’s SF Bildungsromans” uses close readings of two SF bildungsromans, Larissa Lai’s 2002 novel Salt Fish Girl and Jennifer Phang’s 2015 film Advantageous, both of which follow women of color protagonists not permitted to grow up in the ‘right’ ways, to shed light on the instability of a social order simultaneously grounded in the exploitation of marginalized bodies and the illusion of a reproducible, homogenous nation. Ultimately, “Entangled Bodies” uses a literary exploration of quantum entanglement to reveal both the limits of seemingly-totalizing power structures, narrative or otherwise, and the collective possibilities for re-definition that can, in part, be kindled by a favored tool of Western science: the human imagination.
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Mulheres na ciência: vozes, tempos, lugares e trajetóriasSilva, Fabiane Ferreira da January 2012 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2012 / Nesta tese investigo a inserção e a participação das mulheres no campo da ciência moderna
buscando problematizar alguns dos discursos e práticas sociais implicados na constituição de
mulheres cientistas. A pesquisa foi orientada pelas teorias dos Estudos Feministas da Ciência
e Estudos de Gênero, bem como utilizou alguns conceitos de Michel Foucault. Neste estudo,
tomo a ciência e o gênero como construções sociais, culturais, históricas e discursivas em
meio a relações de poder/saber. Esta tese ancora-se metodologicamente na investigação
narrativa a partir dos pressupostos de Jorge Larrosa e de Michel Connelly e Jean Clandinin.
Orientada por esses autores, entendo a narrativa tanto como uma metodologia investigativa
como uma prática social que constitui os sujeitos. Para compor meu corpus de pesquisa optei
pela realização de entrevistas narrativas produzidas com seis mulheres cientistas atuantes em
universidades públicas e numa instituição de pesquisa do Rio Grande do Sul, sendo uma da
área da Farmácia, duas de Ciências Biológicas, duas da Física e a outra da Engenharia de
Computação. Desse modo, busquei conhecer a trajetória acadêmica e profissional dessas
mulheres, as motivações para a escolha da profissão, as dificuldades vivenciadas na profissão,
como elas percebiam a participação das mulheres na ciência, entre outros aspectos. Para
análise das narrativas estabeleci conexões com a análise do discurso na linha de Michel
Foucault. Ao analisar as narrativas, percebi a emergência do discurso biológico utilizado
como justificativa para explicar a feminização e a masculinização de determinadas áreas do
conhecimento, bem como para justificar o entendimento de que as mulheres fazem ciência de
“maneira diferente” dos homens. Esses entendimentos estão relacionados ao pressuposto de
que é o sexo – o fator biológico – que determina as características e funções sociais
diferenciadas entre mulheres e homens. Este estudo possibilitou-me perceber também que a
escolha profissional das entrevistadas foi influenciada por diferentes processos discursivos e
práticas sociais, ora de identificação, ora de confronto, com pessoas da família, com
antigos(as) professores(as), nas experiências escolares, na interação com determinados
artefatos culturais, tais como brinquedos e brincadeiras. A análise das narrativas me mostrou
as diferentes facetas do preconceito de gênero que perpassa as práticas sociais. Sobre essa
questão emergiram a negação do preconceito, o reconhecimento de “brincadeiras” sexistas
que não são percebidas como preconceito e situações explícitas de preconceito de gênero.
Outro aspecto evidenciado refere-se à necessidade de conciliar as exigências da vida
profissional com as responsabilidades familiares, que implicou em jornadas parciais de
trabalho, no adiamento ou recusa da maternidade. Analisar as narrativas produzidas pelas
entrevistadas me possibilitou compreender que a trajetória delas na ciência foi e é construída
em um ambiente baseado em valores e padrões masculinos que restringem, dificultam e
direcionam a participação das mulheres na ciência. Ao analisar as trajetórias dessas mulheres
na ciência, percebi que elas foram de alguma forma levadas a se adaptar ao “modelo
masculino” de pensar e fazer ciência, não apenas para serem consideradas cientistas, mas
também para serem bem-sucedidas na profissão. / In this thesis I investigate the inclusion and participation of women in the field of modern science seeking to question some of the discourses and social practices involved in the formation of scientist women. The research was guided by the theories of Feminist Science Studies and Gender Studies, and used some concepts from Michel Foucault. In this study, I take science and gender as social, cultural, historical and discursive constructions among power/knowledge relations. This thesis is methodologically anchored in the narrative investigation from the assumptions of Jorge Larrosa and of Michel Connelly and Jean Clandinin. Guided by these authors, I consider the narrative as both an investigative methodology as a social practice that constitutes subjects. To compose my research corpus I opted for narrative interviews produced by six scientist women working in public universities and in a research institution in Rio Grande do Sul – one in the Pharmacy field, two in Biological Sciences, two in Physics and two others in Computer Engineering. Therefore, I sought to know the academic and professional history of these women, the motivation for choosing the profession, the difficulties experienced in the profession, how they perceived the participation of women in science, among others. For narrative analysis I established connections with the analysis of discourse according to Michel Foucault. When analyzing these narratives, I noticed the emergence of biological discourse used as justification to explain the feminization and masculinization of certain areas of knowledge, as well as to justify the view that women do science “differently” from men. These understandings are related to the assumption that it is sex – the biological factor – that determines the characteristics and different social functions between women and men. This study also enabled to realize that the career choice of interviewees was influenced by different discursive processes and social practices, sometimes of identification, sometimes confrontational, with family, with older teachers, in school experiences, in the interaction with certain cultural artifacts such as toys and games. The analysis of the narratives showed the different faces of gender bias that permeates social practices. On this issue emerged the denial of bias, the recognition of sexist "jokes" that are not defined as bias and situations perceived as explicit gender bias. Another aspect shown refers to the need to reconcile the demands of career and family responsibilities, which resulted in partial daily work, and the postponement or refusal of motherhood. Analyzing the narratives produced by interviewees allowed me to understand that their path in science was and is built in an environment based on male values and standards that restrict, impede and direct participation of women in science. By analyzing the history of these women in science, I realized that they were somehow made to fit the "male model" of thinking and doing science, not only to be considered scientists, but also to be successful in the profession.
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Looking at Science, Looking at You! : The Feminist Re-visions of Nature(Brain and Genes)Åsberg, Cecilia January 2009 (has links)
Vision has often been a central concern of feminist studies of science, medicine and technology. In cultural or social feminist analysis, the male gaze and the ways in which technoscience accommodates, and in effect organizes the watching of women, has been an important part of the feminist interrogation of the gender and power relations that produce the subjects and the objects of science. This attention is due to the intimate, and power-saturated, merge of processes of seeing and processes of knowing. Inherent in the notion of vision, there is always a politics to ways of seeing, ordering and observing, of organising the knowledge of the world. Historically, this can be exemplified by the eighteen-century Swedish “father” of biological classification, Linnaeus. Taking a leap away from Christian assumptions, Linnaeus placed human beings in a taxonomic order of nature together with other animals. / <p>ISBN 91-87792-49-4 not valid for this book.</p>
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