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(Un)making labor invisible: A syllabus. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The 2022 Gordon Cain Conference brought together participants to discuss the connections between the science of labor and the labor of science, focusing on themes of vulnerability, affect, and interdependence.
  • A key theme that emerged was "invisibility," leading to the creation of a collaborative syllabus aimed at examining historical and contemporary perspectives on scientific labor.
  • The syllabus features six thematic modules that aim to challenge traditional notions of invisible labor, confront gendered labor practices, and promote a more inclusive understanding of the history of science.

Article Abstract

From industrial psychology and occupational therapy to the laboratory bench and scenes of "heroic" fieldwork, there are important connections between the science of labor and the labor of science. Participants in the 2022 Gordon Cain Conference explored how greater attention to these connections might deepen historical understanding of what constitutes "science" and what counts as "labor." Our conversations circled around themes of vulnerability (of systems, individual bodies, historical testimony), affect (pertaining to historical actors and ourselves), and interdependence (e.g. across human groups, species, political boundaries, and time). For the members of this group, which grew out of a panel discussion, these themes and motivations coalesced around a topical focus on invisibility, which helped us to articulate - in the form of a co-created syllabus - research questions about science and labor from multiple angles pertaining to practice, archival preservation, and scholarly representation. This syllabus is organized into six thematic modules that aim to challenge and historicize the concept of invisible labor by facilitating comparisons across geographic, temporal, conceptual, and disciplinary boundaries. The goals of this collaborative syllabus, in sum, are manifold: we seek to facilitate more inclusive histories of science through critical engagement with "invisibility" and thereby promote a more expansive understanding of what constitutes scientific labor; to highlight the constitutive role of gendered labor practices in the scientific enterprise; to draw attention to interdependencies that make all forms of production (knowledge or material) possible; to elucidate systems of remuneration for scientific labor over the longue durée and through pointed comparisons; and, finally, to promote self-reflexivity about the methods we use to narrate the history of science and make sense of our own labors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00732753231180954DOI Listing

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