Call For Papers
Knowledge in a Box:
How Mundane Things Shape Knowledge Production
Organizing committee:
Susanne Bauer, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin, Germany
Maria Rentetzi, National Technical University of Athens, Athens, Greece
Martina Schlünder, Justus-Liebig-University, Giessen, Germany
The topic:
We invite proposals from scholars in the history of science, technology, and
medicine, science and technology studies, the humanities, visual and performing
arts, museum and cultural studies and other related disciplines for a workshop
on the uses and meanings of mundane things such as boxes, packages, bottles,
and vials in shaping knowledge production. In keeping with the conference
theme, we are asking contributors to include specific references to the ways in
which boxes have played a role—commercial, epistemic or otherwise—in their
own particular disciplinary frameworks.
Boxes have always supported the significance of the objects they contained,
allowing specific activities to arise. In the hands of natural historians and
collectors, boxes functioned as a means of organizing their knowledge
throughout the eighteenth century. They formed the material bases of the
cabinet or established collection and accompanied the collector from the initial
gathering of natural specimens to their final display. As “knowledge chests” or
“magazining tools” the history of box-like containers also go back to book
printing and the typographical culture. The artists’ boxes of the early nineteenth
century were used to store the paraphernalia of a new fashionable trend. In the
late nineteenth century the box became the pharmacist’s laboratory and a device
for standardizing and controlling dosage of oral remedies. In the twentieth
century radiotherapy the box was elevated to a multifunctional tool working as a
memory aid to forgetful patients or as “knowledge package” that predetermined
dosages, included equipment, and ready-made radium applicators.
Focusing on medicine, boxes have played a crucial role since the eighteenth
century when doctors ought to bring instruments to their patient’s house for
surgical or obstetrical interventions. In modern operating rooms boxes organize
the workflow and build an essential part of the aseptical regime. Late twentieth
century biomedical scientists store tissue samples in large-scale biobanks, where
samples contained in straws are placed in vials, then the vials in boxes which in
turn are stacked up in "elevators". This storage system facilitates retrieval with
barcodes, indexing each individual sample so that additional variables can be
retrieved from a database. Thus the container and its content are tied up in a
close epistemic and material relationship.
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As it is usually the case the box embodies the knowledge that goes into the
chemical laboratory and its function; it classifies objects into collections of
natural history; it meaningfully orders letters in a printer’s composition or
painting equipment for the artist’ convenience; it standardizes pharmaceutical
dosage forms and allows pharmacists to control the production and
consumption of their remedies; in the commercial world it misleads or informs
customers; it persuades consumers for the integrity of the product that they
enclose; it hides the identity of the object(s) that contains, it shapes professional
identities and is essential for mobilizing, transporting, accumulating and
circulating materials and the knowledge they produce and embody.
Furthermore, if we do understand matter and materiality not as given, solid,
continuous, and stable but rather as something being done, performed, shaped
and embedded in practices, then we should examine closer how bottles and
boxes themselves materialize differently in a set of diverse practices. How do
they change their ontologies by migrating from the kitchen to the laboratory,
from the workshop to the operating room?
We welcome innovative understandings of the role that boxes and containers
have played historically and continue to play in technology, medicine, and
science. We see the workshop as contributing to an ongoing interest in science
and technology studies on the importance of mundane things in scientific
practice and technological innovations.
Dates:
July 26-29, 2012
Submission guidelines:
Deadline for proposals: January 15, 2012
Please submit a 300-words abstract along with your name, institutional
affiliation, email and phone number as a word or pdf attachment to the
organizers of the conference
Proposals will be reviewed and notification of the outcome will be made in
February 15, 2012. We are pursuing publication outlets for selected papers from
the workshop. Therefore we expect full papers from those that will participate
by May 30, 2012. Details will be provided after notification.
Conference registration fee: 50 euros
Place:
The venue of the conference is a wonderful tobacco warehouse renovated to host
the tobacco museum of the city of Kavala in northern Greece.
Contact info:
For further information please contact the organizers:
Susanne Bauer sbauer@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de
Maria Rentetzi mrentetz@vt.edu
Martina Schlünder m.schluender@gmx.de
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