Category: Summary

Haraway: Situated Knowledges

Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective

In her essay Sitauted Knowledge, Haraway critiques science’s claim to and desire for “objectivity”, “the science question in feminism is about objectivity as positioned rationality” (590). Haraway urges feminists to work toward a better account of the world, “a postmodern insistence on irreducible difference and radical multiplicity of local knowledges”(579). She argues that knowledge is embodied, located, multiple, communal, positioned. Partial knowledge is most powerful when coming from a subjugated position, “the peripheries and the depths” (583). These perspectives are most likely to reject the totalizing God’s eye viewpoint, knowing it is not theirs, creating space for understanding knowledge as critical and interpretative. This “gaze from nowhere” (581) is disembodied, “the deadly fantasy” (580), “the power to see and not be seen”, “the unmarked positions of Man and White” (581). In contrast, partial knowledge, stitched together many times over through “webs of differentiated positioning” and “power-sensitive conversation”, builds toward a feminist objectivity. Knowledge is interpretive and always involves partial and critical translation, “feminist objectivity means quite simply situated knowledges” (581).

To describe this standpoint, Haraway engages the metaphor of vision. Vision is always embodied and often technologically enhanced. In the modern world, “vision in this technological feast becomes unregulated gluttony; all seems not just mythically about the god trick of seeing everything from nowhere, but to have put the myth into ordinary practice.” (581) In light of the tech developments of the last ~20 years, especially the creation and use of “objective” big data, this technological gluttony and the practice of seeing from nowhere is likely even more of an ordinary practice than when Haraway wrote this essay in 1988.

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Mapping as Method

Mapping as a Method: History and Theoretical Commitments

Valerie Futch & Michelle Fine (2014)

The article highlights three mapping studies conducted by the authors to demonstrate the utility of mapping as a useful  method for social inquiry and gathering information about subjectivities and identities. The authors historically situate the mapping method as stemming from Milgram and Joledet,  Winnicott, and critical feminist geographers, but note that the method has been overlooked by much of social psychology as a discipline. Interested in investigating “life-space” (from Lewin) the authors contend that mapping “can be rediscovered and revitalized as a highly useful qualitative method for researching our increasingly complex and ‘hyphenated’ lives” (44).

Mapping can provide insight into how people narrate and represent their own lives, life spaces, self, and others and “enables researchers to work with visual material that is highly interpretive, across conceptual landscapes (from the individual to the social), and in between various contexts and shifting structural conditions” (44). Mapping can highlight and revive the focus (historically from Dewey, James, DuBois and others) on the spheres that individuals inhabit daily and help researchers understand how, quoting Joledet, the “link between space and identity, space and experience, is linked to personal history.”

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Mental Mapping

Where We Go From Here: The Mental Sketch Mapping Method and Its Analytic Components

J.J. Gieseking, (2013)

Mental mapping has a vaguely defined methodological history. Proponents contend that the method “affords a lens into the way people produce and experience space, forms of spatial intelligence, and dynamics of human-environment relations” and can be used as a “tool for examining the roles and meanings of space and place in everyday lives.” Through the discussion of original research, Gieseking provides an analysis and critique of the mental mapping methods devised by Lynch (Image of the City, 1960) and used Milgram and Jodelet (1970) and others in variety of ways. The article resulted from Geiseking’s frustration with and desire to understand the best practices for utilizing  the mental mapping method and the ambiguous guidelines for analyzing mental maps.

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Device Ecologies

The conceptual framing, design and evaluation of device ecologies for collaborative practices

(2011). Tim Coughlan, Trevor D. Collins, Anne Adams, Yvonne Rogers, Pablo A. Hayae, Estefanıa Martın.  International Journal of Human-Computer Studies

Researchers examined use of “device ecologies” through observation of three instances collaborative work that took place in a tech-enhanced room. Researchers designed the device ecology (tech-enhanced room) to watch the interchange between individuals in the three groups: undergrad geology study; undergrad biodiversity study; school church historical study. Items in the device ecology included a tabletop computer (view map, compare images, write/view hypotheses), Mirrored projection of tabletop,  laptops (2 or 3), a video stream to field site, phone, content management system (platform for sharing between devices).

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(Dis)Placing Learning

Learning Spaces, learning environments and the ‘dis’placement of learning

Herbert Thomas (2009)

The physical learning environment is an integral part of the learning process. Traditional learning spaces imply a certain type of teaching and management strategies and can constrain the various possible types of learning. Traditional lecture halls do not contain affordances to promote active learning: “engaged learning is an emergent property of learning spaces and environments that are designed to provide affordances that actively encourage such engagement” (503). Learning does not occur in formally designed spaces but rather takes place informally; this notion liberates learning from its traditional boxed-in nature.

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Welcome to Cyberia

Arturo Escobar, (1994) Current Anthropology

In “Welcome to Cyberia, Arturo Escobar provides details how anthropological research methods can be used to explore and better understand cyberculture. The fact that “technologies are bringing about a fundamental transformation in the structure and meaning of modern society” (211) warrants an anthropological approach to research. According to Escobar, to articulate an “anthropology of cyberculture” (211) we need to move away from the idea that technology is value-neutral and independent of socioeconomic and political contexts. Taking a constructivist approach, we could recognize the situated-ness of tech and its relationship to social processes in order to reveal the  inter-relatedness of technology, society, and nature. Research from this perspective would result in “a multipath and multilevel evolutionary model of technological change” (212) that identifies socially relevant groups and their interpretations of the technologies they encounter to provide insight into the common uses of  technologies and their adoption.

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The Web of Life

Fritoj Capra, (1996)
Originally published on my blog

In his book, The web of life, Fritoj Capra provides a synthesis of ideas to present a new understanding of life both in the biological and philosophical sense. He advocates for a connective view of life that integrates ideas from various realms including biology, ecology, physics, systems thinking, and cybernetics.

Part 1: The Cultural Context

Deep Ecology

Capra starts off by outlining Deep Ecology, a new perspective through which to view living systems. Deep Ecology questions our anthropocentric notions of how life is structured and advocates for a paradigm shift to a more ecological, holistic worldview. Capra makes a distinction between ‘ecological’ and ‘holistic’ noting that ‘holistic’ seems less appropriate for this new paradigm:

“A holistic view of, say, a bicycle means to see the bicycle as a functional whole and to understand the interdependence of its parts accordingly. An ecological view of the bicycle includes that but it adds to it the perceptions of how the bicycle is embedded in it natural and social environment –  where the raw materials that went into it came from, how it was manufactured, how it use affects the natural environment and the community by which it is used and so on.” (7)

This emphasis on the importance of context and contextual knowledge is central to Capra’s ideas and continues throughout the book.

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Engines of Inquiry: Teaching, Technology, and Learner-Centered Approaches to Culture and History

Randy Bass, (1997), American Studies Crossroads Project
Originally written for ITP Core 1

The imaginary/conceptual “game of perfect information” holds that, with the right setup computers can satisfy all our informational needs. When the language of this game enters into the conversation about technology and education, the conversation goes awry. According to Bass, when attempting to discern the impact of technology on learning we must consider: (a) how teaching/learning is a complex process that occurs and builds knowledge over time and (b) how learning contexts must be analyzed ecologically with the understanding that learning does not happen in one place, one way, via one device or method.

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