TY - JOUR
T1 - An introduction to history of science and the emotions
AU - Dror, Otniel E.
AU - Hitzer, Bettina
AU - Laukötter, Anja
AU - León-Sanz, Pilar
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 by The History of Science Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - This essay introduces our call for an intertwined history-of-emotions/ history-of-science perspective. We argue that the history of science can greatly extend the history of emotions by proffering science qua science as a new resource for the study of emotions. We present and read science, in its multiple diversities and locations, and in its variegated activities, products, theories, and emotions, as constitutive of the norms, experiences, expressions, and regimes of emotions. Reciprocally, we call for a new reading of science in terms of emotions as an analytical category. Assuming emotions are intelligible and culturally learned, we extend the notion of emotion to include a nonintentional and noncausal “emotional style,” which is inscribed into (and can reciprocally be generated by) technologies, disease entities, laboratory models, and scientific texts. Ultimately, we argue that emotional styles interrelate with broader emotional cultures and thus can contribute to and/or challenge grand historical narratives.
AB - This essay introduces our call for an intertwined history-of-emotions/ history-of-science perspective. We argue that the history of science can greatly extend the history of emotions by proffering science qua science as a new resource for the study of emotions. We present and read science, in its multiple diversities and locations, and in its variegated activities, products, theories, and emotions, as constitutive of the norms, experiences, expressions, and regimes of emotions. Reciprocally, we call for a new reading of science in terms of emotions as an analytical category. Assuming emotions are intelligible and culturally learned, we extend the notion of emotion to include a nonintentional and noncausal “emotional style,” which is inscribed into (and can reciprocally be generated by) technologies, disease entities, laboratory models, and scientific texts. Ultimately, we argue that emotional styles interrelate with broader emotional cultures and thus can contribute to and/or challenge grand historical narratives.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84990046275&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/687590
DO - 10.1086/687590
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C2 - 30125073
AN - SCOPUS:84990046275
SN - 0369-7827
VL - 31
SP - 1
EP - 18
JO - Osiris
JF - Osiris
IS - 1
ER -