“Students and scholars in the field of science and technology studies want to know how scientific knowledge is produced. We believe that the idealized accounts of knowledge productionare inadequate, given the complexity of the process they claim to describe. STS scholars seek to understand how science operates by analyzing historical case studies, observing contemporary scientists at work, examining representations of scientific ideas in textbooks or journals, and studying the infrastructure of scientific institutions. This interdisciplinary field brings together anthropologists, philosophers, historians, literary theorists, sociologists and some practicing scientists. The multidisciplinary nature of STS results from the wide variety of influences that contribute to the construction of scientific knowledge.”
“I became interested in science studies after I wrote Myths of Gender. Originally I had formulated my questions around the hunt for racism or sexism in science. But I encountered so many instances of good scientists doing what some would call “bad science” about race and gender that I began to wonder if there wasn’t something more generic about the production of scientific knowledge that I needed to understand. Thus began my search to understand more broadly how cultural setting—time and place—becomes part of the production of scientific knowledge. This led to my second book —Sexing the Body.”
For those who would like a broad introduction to the field of science studies I recommend the following books and web sites: