We invite paper proposals for the
international workshop Small
Science: Perspectives on
Contemporary Small-Scale
Research. The
event will take place in person on February
2-3, 2023 at the Institut
d’Història de la Ciència,
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. However,
there will also be a virtual option
for those choosing to attend
remotely.
Through the second half of the 20th
century, the rise of Big Science
eclipsed researchers producing
substantial knowledge with
modest means. Since the turn of the
century, however, a concern with small
ways of knowing and doing is
noticeable. Isabelle Stengers’
slow science, Manu Prakash’s frugal
science,Rosi Braidotti’s minor
science, Simon Werrett’s
thrifty science… Increased attention
is being paid, in the current
planetary crisis, to humble yet
effective research practices. The
early modern approach to “achieving a
balance between spending and buying
new and saving and making use of
things”, Werrett notices, seems to be
“reemerging today”: “While people in
the late-twentieth century supposed
that the future of science would be
mostly ‘big,’ as we enter the
twenty-first century, it seems that
the future will also be small” (2019:
196).
We mean the term small science both
as an actor's category (18th-20th
century) and a term encompassing a
range of recent concerns. We contend
that
small science, broadly
construed, has not ceased to
be a relevant, if faintly visible
feature of contemporary science.
Following a symposium on Small
Science at the ESHS Conference in
Brussels (September 2022), and
building on an ongoing
research project (PID2019-105131GB-I00
SMALLSCIENCE A historical survey of
contemporary small-scale research),
the workshop aims at placing
small-scale research practices in
historical perspective. We invite
papers exploring some of the following
themes:
- the uses and meanings of the
category itself;
- small science, science
policy and the politics of
science;
- small science, repair,
maintenance and infrastructure;
- the relationship between small-
and large-scale scientific
practices;
- the interplay between public and
private interests in small-scale
projects;
- the connection between
small-scale, lay and amateur
research, as well as citizen
science;
- the historical roots of
contemporary small science;
- the representations and
imaginaries of small science;
- the motivations driving
small-scale research practices;
- case-studies exemplifying small
science and providing an
empirical basis for discussion.
A paper proposal of up to 300
words and a short bio are to be
sent to
xavier...@uab.cat before
15
October 2022. Submissions
from early career researchers are
welcome. Please state if you need
support for accommodation.
Limited
funds are available from
the organizers to cover part of the
expenses.
There will also be a
discussion about an edited journal
issue or book based on papers
presented at the workshop.
References
Braidotti, R. “A Theoretical
Framework for the Critical
Posthumanities”. Theory, Culture
& Society 36, (2018): 31–61.
Martens, L., Cybulski, J. S.,
Clements, J. & Prakash, M.
“Foldscope: Origami-Based Paper
Microscope”. PLoS ONE 9,
e98781, 2014: 1–11.
Stengers, I. Another Science is
Possible. A Manifesto for Slow
Science. Cambridge: Polity,
2018.
Werrett, S. Thrifty Science. Making
the Most of Materials in the History
of Experiment. Chicago: Chicago
University Press, 2019.
Xavier Roqué (UAB, on behalf of the
organising committee)