Testigo_modesto@segundo_milenio

The article discusses the figure of the British scientist Robert Boyle as the construction of the modern image of scientific authority and objectivity through social and literary technologies that systematically exclude nonhegemonic groups (women, colored people). The paper argues that the figure of...

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Autores principales: Donna J. Haraway, Pau Pitarch
Formato: article
Lenguaje:CA
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Publicado: Universitat de Barcelona 2004
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/372c42d5c7984726ad8bf87d856f1cfa
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:372c42d5c7984726ad8bf87d856f1cfa2021-12-02T17:55:57ZTestigo_modesto@segundo_milenio1136-57812013-9470https://doaj.org/article/372c42d5c7984726ad8bf87d856f1cfa2004-01-01T00:00:00Zhttp://revistes.ub.edu/index.php/lectora/article/view/7061https://doaj.org/toc/1136-5781https://doaj.org/toc/2013-9470The article discusses the figure of the British scientist Robert Boyle as the construction of the modern image of scientific authority and objectivity through social and literary technologies that systematically exclude nonhegemonic groups (women, colored people). The paper argues that the figure of the self-invisible modest witness in technoscientific discourse should be queered in order to enable a more corporeal and situated form of knowledge.Donna J. HarawayPau PitarchUniversitat de BarcelonaarticleWomen. FeminismHQ1101-2030.7CAENESEUFRGLITPTLectora: Revista de Dones i Textualitat, Iss 10 (2004)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language CA
EN
ES
EU
FR
GL
IT
PT
topic Women. Feminism
HQ1101-2030.7
spellingShingle Women. Feminism
HQ1101-2030.7
Donna J. Haraway
Pau Pitarch
Testigo_modesto@segundo_milenio
description The article discusses the figure of the British scientist Robert Boyle as the construction of the modern image of scientific authority and objectivity through social and literary technologies that systematically exclude nonhegemonic groups (women, colored people). The paper argues that the figure of the self-invisible modest witness in technoscientific discourse should be queered in order to enable a more corporeal and situated form of knowledge.
format article
author Donna J. Haraway
Pau Pitarch
author_facet Donna J. Haraway
Pau Pitarch
author_sort Donna J. Haraway
title Testigo_modesto@segundo_milenio
title_short Testigo_modesto@segundo_milenio
title_full Testigo_modesto@segundo_milenio
title_fullStr Testigo_modesto@segundo_milenio
title_full_unstemmed Testigo_modesto@segundo_milenio
title_sort testigo_modesto@segundo_milenio
publisher Universitat de Barcelona
publishDate 2004
url https://doaj.org/article/372c42d5c7984726ad8bf87d856f1cfa
work_keys_str_mv AT donnajharaway testigomodestosegundomilenio
AT paupitarch testigomodestosegundomilenio
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