Call for applications: Summer School
The summer school "Narratives of Disruption and Continuity" explores different contexts and forms in which transformations in the production and use of technology and scientific knowledge have been represented in modern times (1800-present). We will examine why and how actors – ranging from scientists and historians to journalists and politicians – have talked about, described or imagined different types of change. This includes change that had already occurred, that could or should occur but also change that did not or was not to occur.
To be more specific, this summer school will explore the conditions of possibility, including specific socio-cultural constellations, from which narratives of change have emerged and do emerge. What are their specific loci of enunciation? How do narratives of disruption and continuity function – or rather, how are they meant to function? Furthermore, we aim to analyze the content of narratives that present transformations of science, technology, and society as being disruptive, or as developing slowly, in non-linear ways, or as not happening at all. Moreover, we will discuss how they are produced, distributed, and received, and approach the figures, tropes, and cultural techniques employed.
The summer school will examine these themes from the perspectives of history, philosophy, and sociology of science and technology. We will discuss state-of-the-art theories, methods, and research designs that aim at better understanding the complex web of scientific narratives, their costs and benefits, and their impact on scientific careers. The summer school will give early career researchers the opportunity to discuss these issues with leading scholars and probe new ideas for their own projects.
Confirmed Lecturers and Working Group/Keynote titles:
Cyrus Mody, University of Maastricht – History and Sociology of Science: Science and Technology for Development: Whose Narratives, Whose Disruption?
Hanne Andersen, University of Copenhagen – Philosophy of Science: From revolutions to transformative research: History, philosophy, funding and policy
Robert Meunier, Independent Researcher/Institute for Cultural Inquiry, Berlin – Philosophy of Science: Discovery narratives in molecular biology
Francesco Pierri, Politecnico di Milano – Computational Social Sciences: Regulating Online Platforms in the Age of Misinformation and Disinformation
Matthias Revers, University of Leeds/University of Hamburg – Political Communication: Narratives of Disruption in Social Media