A Few Steps Toward an Anthropology of the Iconoclastic Gesture
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Science in Context
- Vol. 10 (1) , 63-83
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0269889700000260
Abstract
The Argument: A large part of our critical acumen depends on a clear distinction between what is real and what is constructed, what is out there in the nature of things and what is in there in the representation we make of them. Something has been lost however for the sake of this clarity and a heavy price has been paid for this dichotomy between ontological questions on the one hand and the epistemological questions on the other: it has become impossible to understand the simplest features of action. What the critical gesture smashes into pieces is precisely the very possibility of hearing as synonyms the two sentences, “I have fabricated it well, thus it is autonomous.” The paper tries to find a way to avoid the critical gesture and link again together facts and fetishes, producing this rather strange hybrid: factishes.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nature and SocietyPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2003
- Socrates' and Callicles' Settlement--or, The Invention of the Impossible Body PoliticConfigurations, 1997
- On InterobjectivityMind, Culture, and Activity, 1996
- Ontological Choreography: Agency through Objectification in Infertility ClinicsSocial Studies of Science, 1996
- The Mangle of PracticePublished by University of Chicago Press ,1995
- Science as Practice and CulturePublished by University of Chicago Press ,1992