
Ethnographic Stories as Generalizations that Intervene
Author(s) -
Brit Ross Winthereik,
Helen Verran
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
science and technology studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.675
H-Index - 14
ISSN - 2243-4690
DOI - 10.23987/sts.55280
Subject(s) - ethnography , articulation (sociology) , conversation , relation (database) , sociology , epistemology , generative grammar , work (physics) , anthropology , philosophy , linguistics , computer science , communication , political science , politics , law , mechanical engineering , database , engineering
Located within classic and more recent works in STS the paper grapples with the question of how to write ethnographic stories that generalize particular spacetime places, and simultaneously generalize about their own modes of existence. Growing as a prolonged, cross-generational, and transcontinental conversation between the two authors the paper discusses the capacities of ethnographic stories to work as generative interventions. We begin with the situation in which most ethnographers of science and technology find themselves: navigating a passage in projects in which ethnographic analyses are obliged to work instrumentally in relation to organizational or technological change. Developing with an ethnographic description of monitoring work in an environmental NGO and Latour’s analysis of a Holbein painting, we draw on Strathern’s notion of partiality and Haraway’s articulation of double vision.