CfP: Edited collection on STS Approaches to Science Communication
Editors: Sarah R Davies (University of Copenhagen) & Ulrike Felt (University of Vienna)
Public communication
of science is a key way that people encounter scientific
knowledge. Whether in mass media, science museums, public events, or
online, science communication is used by audiences in different ways and
for multiple purposes. This volume will gather together work that takes
a critical Science and Technology Studies approach to such
public communication. Building on STS traditions of exploring questions
of scientific authority, democracy, and public knowledges, it
will interrogate science communication activities to ask: what is
happening to science, to publics, and to communication within public
communication of science?
We are particularly concerned with
the diverse spaces and places that science communication takes place
within, the different issues that get addressed, the formats and
modalities developed, and the connections and differences between these. How
is it different to communicate physics and health research? Or
environmental issues and biology? What different qualities does
scientific knowledge take on as it is represented online, in an event
space or festival, or through a museum exhibit? We welcome
contributions that reflect on these wider questions of how and why
specific forms of science communication are articulated as they are, as
well as studies of different actors involved in communication and their
geneaologies of involvement. We are also interested in approaches that
seek to connect STS literature with other fields that study science
communication, such as risk communication, health communication, or
museum studies.
We anticipate that chapters will draw
on empirical material and case studies, rather than being purely
theoretic. Questions and topic areas for papers may include, but are not
limited to, the following:
· What are the specificities
of communicating different forms of scientific knowledge, such as
environmental knowledge, medical research, or physics?
· How is
scientific knowledge represented within different science communication
formats, and how do the affordances of those formats shape such
representations?
· How are different forms of science communication
produced and consumed, and what role do topics and formats play in such
production and consumption?
· How are identities – such as those of
scientists, science communicators, or citizens – negotiated
through public communication?
· How is science communication shaped
by the spaces and places it appears in, and how does it in turn
work upon those spaces and places?
In order to ensure a coherent volume, our plan is to hold a workshop where authors can present and discuss their manuscripts (provisionally, late May 2017 in Vienna). At
this stage we are therefore requesting the submission of extended
abstracts (approximately two pages, or 1,000 words, including a detailed
outline of the paper, explanation of empirical material, and summary of
key arguments) for consideration. Abstracts should be submitted to srdavies@hum.ku.dk before January 31st 2017. Enquiries can also be directed to this address.