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Susan Leigh Star

    Susan Leigh Star fue una socióloga estadounidense cuyo trabajo se centró en el estudio de la información en la sociedad moderna. Exploró mundos de información, infraestructura, clasificación y estandarización, con énfasis en la sociología de la ciencia, el trabajo y la historia de la ciencia, la medicina, la tecnología y los sistemas de comunicación/información. En su investigación, empleó comúnmente metodologías cualitativas y un enfoque de teoría feminista para comprender las intrincadas relaciones dentro de la información y la sociedad.

    The Science Studies Reader
    Sorting Things Out
    • Sorting Things Out

      • 389 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      What do a seventeenth-century mortality table, apartheid classifications in South Africa, and the separation of machine-washables from hand-washables have in common? They exemplify classification—the foundation of information infrastructures. The authors delve into how categories and standards shape the modern world, examining various classification systems such as the International Classification of Diseases, Nursing Interventions Classification, and race classifications during apartheid. They highlight the role of invisibility in how classification influences human interaction, exploring how categories can be rendered invisible and how individuals can challenge this invisibility. The authors treat classification systems as part of the constructed information environment, akin to how urban historians analyze zoning decisions to narrate a city's history. This work carries a moral agenda, as each standard and category reflects a particular viewpoint while silencing others. Classifications can create advantages or hardships, impacting job availability and regional benefits. The authors investigate how these choices are made and encourage reflection on the moral and political implications of classification processes.

      Sorting Things Out
      4,0
    • The Science Studies Reader

      • 590 páginas
      • 21 horas de lectura

      The Reader focuses on the practices of modern and contemporary science and technology located in different national and institutional settings, with some attention to non- Western contexts. By mapping some of the open questions and points of tension likely to occupy the field for years to come, the essays in the Reader cast fresh light on what "science" means at the end of the twentieth century.

      The Science Studies Reader