18 research outputs found
Cuerpos y prácticas: una década de estudios ctg
Resumen En este trabajo presentamos algunas investigaciones realizadas en el área de estudios sociales de la ciencia bajo el enfoque denominado Ciencia, TecnologĂa y GĂ©nero (CTG). La intersecciĂłn de los estudios sociales de la ciencia con la teorĂa feminista y los estudios de gĂ©nero ha dado lugar a este campo de estudio interdisciplinar. En el Estado español, se han llevado a cabo mĂşltiples trabajos en esta lĂnea, de los que exponemos algunos de los realizados por nuestro grupo de investigaciĂłn al menos en los Ăşltimos diez años. Se centran en estudios de caso, que implican diferentes tecnologĂas biomĂ©dicas, y en los que los cuerpos juegan un papel fundamental estableciendo alianzas, resistencias o cuestionando los marcos normativos en los que cuerpos y tecnologĂas se hayan inmersos
Reading sleep through science fiction : the parable of beggars and choosers
This article examines the iconic 'Beggars' trilogy by feminist science fiction writer, Nancy Kress. These novels, produced in the early to mid-1990s, take as their 'thought experiment' two points of rupture and contemporary cultural contestation: the advent of human genetic engineering and sleep, or, more specifically, the prospect of a sleepless society. I shall begin by situating my analysis of the Kress trilogy in this nexus of fields. I shall consider the interest of Kress's works for the sociology of sleep as well as for a cultural analysis of science. In this context, and drawing in part on the work of Haran, I will suggest the particular value of science fiction as not only a site for, but also a source of, narrativized social theory. I shall introduce the notion of popular episteme as an analytic concept that aims to link the discursive to the social - that is, to theorize the relationship of textuality to materiality. I shall refer also to the psychoanalytic concept of 'phantasy' as a point of convergence for both structures of feeling and structures of knowledge. I shall then introduce the Kress works, focusing particularly on the first novel Beggars in Spain, locating it in a period in which feminist science fiction saw a marked renaissance, and in which speculative theorizations of genetics formed a distinct subgenre. The analysis will then focus on three core themes emergent in the novels that, I shall argue, have profound contemporaneous resonance. These are the questions of: embodied capital; the political economy of what I will term fast time; and paranoia and the human condition