Science Studies Centre,
Department of Sociology,
Lancaster University, UK
ANT Resource (Thematic List)
CSS Home Page | ANT Resource Thematic List | ANT Resource Alphabetical List
(April 2000)
The resource is divided thematically. Please click on the appropriate topic, and use the 'back' button of your browser to retrace your steps.
| A. Theory | |
| B. Substantive Studies | |
| C. Related Issues | |
Law (1992), `Notes on the Theory of the Actor-Network: Ordering, Strategy and
Heterogeneity'
A good place to start for interested readers who have not previously encountered
the approach.
Law (1997), `Traduction/Trahison: Notes on
ANT'
Appears on these web pages. Explores the development of actor-network theory
through examples, from 1985-1995, arguing that it has changed, that it is not
singular but multiple in character, and that defences of (or attacks on) a fixed
position called 'actor-network theory' miss the point, since what is interesting
is the displacements, and the issues that arise in debate.
Calás and Smircich (1999), `Past Postmodernism?
Reflections and Tentative Directions'
A clear and concise account of the implications of 'postmodernism' for the
theorising of organisations, which offers, as posssible post-postmodernisms,
feminist theory, narrative analysis, actor-network theory, and post-colonial
theorising.
Latour and Woolgar (1979), `Laboratory Life: the Social Construction of Scientific
Facts'
The first major study of the building of facts in a laboratory in any theoretical
tradition, and a landmark book in the sociology of science. Written before the
term 'actor-network' was invented, and drawing on a range of resources including
semiotics and ethnomethodology, it nonetheless catches important ANT moves,
for instance in its account of the ways in which facts move through modalities
as they gather allies to become more and more solid - and less and less attached
to the contingencies which generated them in the first place.
Latour (1983), `Give Me a Laboratory and
I will Raise the World'
An important pre-cursor paper in which it is argued that large scale 'macro'
phenomena are not different in kind from small scale 'micro' phenomena, and
should be analysed in the same terms. Hence an attack on the 'macro'-'micro'
distinction in social theory.
Serres (1974), `La Traduction, Hermes III'
The notion of 'translation', the action of making equivalent which is also
a betrayal, was drawn by Michel Callon (1980) from
the writing of Michel Serres
Callon (1980), `Struggles and Negotiations to define what is Problematic and
what is not: the Sociology of Translation'
An early, perhaps the first empirical, example of the 'sociology of translation',
using the case of the véhicule électrique. Derives the term 'translation' from
Michel Serres (1974).
Callon and Latour (1981), `Unscrewing the
Big Leviathan: how actors macrostructure reality and how sociologists help them
to do so'
An important pre-cursor paper in which it is argued that large scale 'macro'
phenomena are not different in kind from small scale 'micro' phenomena, and
should be analysed in the same terms. Hence an attack on the 'macro'-'micro'
distinction in social theory.
Callon and Law (1982), `On Interests
and their Transformation: Enrolment and Counter-Enrolment'
Argues the social interests are constructed in networks of heterogeneous
relations.
Callon (1986), `Some Elements of a Sociology of Translation: Domestication
of the Scallops and the Fishermen of Saint Brieuc Bay'
One of the most discussed papers in actor-network theory. This presses 'symmetry'
between different entities including fishermen, various technologies, and scallops.
Much commented on, much criticised. (See Collins and
Yearley (1992))
Callon (1998), `An Essay on Framing and
Overflowing: Economic Externalities Revisited by Sociology'
Introduces useful new terminology for exploring the simplifications that
are implicit in the formation of economic (and any other) actors.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999),
`Gino's Lesson on Humanity'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Latour (1988), `Irréductions, published with The
Pasteurisation of France'
A tightly written philosophical-theoretical statement which rigorously develops
the implications of the irreducibility of different entities, and the worlds
that are formed when these link together into chains or networks. A crucial
theoretical resource
Latour (1988), `The Pasteurization of France'
A large-scale semiotic analysis of 'Pasteur' who is understood as a set of
strategies, arrangements and mobilisations of different entities into a more
or less coherent and more or less fragile network, of which Pasteur the person
is a spokesperson. Accordingly, Pasteur is an effect, rather than a prime mover,
an individual genius.
Latour (1990), `Drawing Things Together'
Set up as a discussion of the division between 'the West' and 'the rest',
this article rejects the idea that there was a decisive event or moment which
led to the division, but instead locates this in a series of small technologies
which generated simplified and manipulable representations or 'immutable mobiles'
which thereby generated centres of control. These include printing, cartography
and visual depiction. The argument is somewhat reminiscent of Michel Foucault's
understanding of surveillance in the disciplinary or modern episteme.
Latour (1999), `Politiques de la Nature: Comment
faire entrer les sciences en démocratie'
A successor to 'We Have Never Been Modern', which explores the possible character
of a non-modern constitution which would dissolve the distinction between facts
and values (science and politics) with a more flexible and revisable process
in which what is and what is good (and can live together) are negotiated. This
book will appear in translation in English in 2000 or 2001.
Callon (1991), `Techno-economic Networks
and Irreversibility'
An exploration of the formation and dynamics of heterogeneous networks which
attends, in particular, to they strategies which secure the relative irreversibility
of those networks.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1998), `Reconfiguring Trajectories: Agencies, Bodies
and Political Articulations: the Case of Muscular Dystrophies'
Explores the configurations of bodies, materials and collectivities involved
in the disabilities of certain muscular dystrophies. An example of 'after ANT'
at work which combines ANT concerns with some of the insights of phenomenology
de Laet and Mol (2000), `The Zimbabwe
Bush Pump: Mechanics of a Fluid Technology'
Considers a 'fluid technology', and treats its strength as a function of
that fluidity rather than a structured and stable network.
Latour (1993), `We Have Never Been Modern'
Modernity claims to be clear and pure, to distinguish with clarity between
the human and the non-human, while in reality it is full of hybrids, quasi-human,
quasi-non-human. This is the secret of its remarkable dynamism: that in practice
it generates hybrids in profusion, while insisting that there is really a fundamental
distinction between human and non-human.
Latour (1996), `Petite Réflexion sur le Culte
Moderne des Dieux Faitiches'
A study of 'factishes' which combine the property of being real, and being
created. A further exploration, then, of the 'hybrids' considered in Latour
(1993c)
Latour (1996), `Social theory and the
study of computerized work sites'
Reviews developments in social theory and information technology. Uses actor
network ideas and studies but also refers to other important theoretical influences
in the context of new information technologies.
Law (1994), `Organizing Modernity'
An organisational ethnography of the management of a large scientific laboratory
which is also a theoretical exploration of the links between actor-network theory
and other theoretical traditions including Foucauldianism and symbolic interaction.
It is also critical of the tendency towards managerialism and 'centering' of
some parts of actor-network theory.
Law (1997), `Traduction/Trahison: Notes on
ANT'
Appears on these web pages. Explores the development of actor-network theory
through examples, from 1985-1995, arguing that it has changed, that it is not
singular but multiple in character, and that defences of (or attacks on) a fixed
position called 'actor-network theory' miss the point, since what is interesting
is the displacements, and the issues that arise in debate.
Law and Hassard (1999), `Actor Network
Theory and After'
A book which attempts, in the same mode as this resource, to argue that actor-network
has moved on, and that the interesting issues which arise have to do with questions
arising (which are often shared with other traditions) rather than defending
(or attacking) ANT. Includes papers by Steve Brown and Rose Capdevila, Michel
Callon, Anni Dugdale, Kevin Hetherington, Emilie Gomart and Antoine Hennion,
Bruno Latour, John Law, Nick Lee and Paul Stenner, Annemarie Mol, Ingunn Moser
and John Law, Marilyn Strathern and Helen Verran.
Law and Singleton (2000), `This is
Not an Object'
Explores an object (alcoholic liver disease) which turns out to be enacted
in different locations in different ways overlapping and partially connected
performances. It is argued that this means that it is not an object
Mol (2001), `The Body Multiple: Artherosclerosis
in Practice'
'After actor-network', rather than ANT. On the multiplicity of objects, the
distribution of difference performances over different sites, the forms of co-ordination
between them and their different dependencies.
Mol (1999), `Ontological Politics: a Word
and Some Questions'
How are worlds, realities, performed into being? This is an ANT question.
Here an 'ontological politics' is imagined.
Star (1992), `The Trojan door: Organizations,
work, and the 'open Black Box''
One of the earliest 'After Actor Network' papers: Draws on a variety of theoretical
traditions which form a promising assemblage of ideas for studying organisation,
technology and work.
Teil and Latour (1995), `The Hume
Machine: Can Association Networks Do More Than Formal Rules?'
Another attempt of a scientometric approach to describing associations -
draws on ANT to a crtain extent but is rather 'After Actor Network'.
Urry (1998), `The Concept of Society
and the Future of Sociology'
Uses the notion of 'fluids', themselves developed as an alternative to the
(actor) network metaphor, to retheorise the nature of society
Law (1991), `A Sociology of Monsters: Essays on Power, Technology and Domination'
This collection includes a variety of theoretical approaches to the social
shaping of technology, but many adopt an actor-network approach.
Bijker and Law (1992), `Shaping Technology,
Building Society: Studies in Sociotechnical Change'
This collection includes a variety of theoretical approaches to the social
shaping of technology, some of which adopt an actor-network approach.
Meadel and Rabeharisoa (1996), `Représenter,
Hybrider, Coordoner'
A series of empirical and theoretical papers by members and those associated
with the Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation at the École des Mines de Paris.
Gadelha and Nazaré Freitas Pereira (1997),
`A Caixa Preta de Pandora'
This Portuguese volume collects together a number of important articles in
actor-network theory, concentrating in particular on pieces by Bruno Latour
and Michel Callon.
Brenna, Law et al. (1998), `Machines, Agency
and Desire,'
A collection of essays on materialities, desires and technologies, influenced
by a variety of (mostly post-structuralist) theoretical approaches, including
actor-network theory. It concludes contributions by Anni Dugdale, Celia Lury,
Mike Michael, Ingunn Moser and John Law, and Bernike Pasveer and Madeleine Akrich.
Law and Hassard (1999), `Actor Network
Theory and After'
A book which attempts, in the same mode as this resource, to argue that actor-network
has moved on, and that the interesting issues which arise have to do with questions
arising (which are often shared with other traditions) rather than defending
(or attacking) ANT. Includes papers by Steve Brown and Rose Capdevila, Michel
Callon, Anni Dugdale, Kevin Hetherington, Emilie Gomart and Antoine Hennion,
Bruno Latour, John Law, Nick Lee and Paul Stenner, Annemarie Mol, Ingunn Moser
and John Law, Marilyn Strathern and Helen Verran.
Hetherington and Law (2000), `After Networks:
Special Issue of Society and Space'
A collection of articles in an 'after network' mode, with special reference
to spatiality and movement.
Latour (1987), `Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers Through
Society'
The only ANT textbook? - though the extent to which Latour uses the notion
of 'actor-network' is limited. Nevertheless, an important account of the method,
in particular in its application to science and technology.
Albertsen and Diken (2000), `What is 'the Social?''
A sympathetic exploration of strategies and approaches in contemporary social
theory in terms of a double distinction between purity and hybridity on the
one hand, and order and chaos on the other. Actor-network is one of the approaches
so considered.
Amsterdamska (1990), `Surely, You Must
be Joking, Monsieur Latour!'
Critical commentary on the non-humanism of actor-network theory.
Ashmore (1993), `Behaviour Modification
of a Catflap: a contribution to the Sociology of Things'
An analysis, in equal measure rigorous and humorous, which explores the extent
to which is possible to sustain generalised symmetry between a cat, a person
and a catflap.
Brown (1992), `Organization studies and
scientific authority'
A review of ANT in organisation stuies from a methodological perspective.
Button (1993), `The curious case of vanishing
technology'
Critical comment on ANT from an ethnomethodolical position in the context
of work and technology. Questions the arbitrary nature of ANT accounts and the
ANT preference for processes rather than actions.
Calás and Smircich (1999), `Past Postmodernism?
Reflections and Tentative Directions'
A clear and concise account of the implications of 'postmodernism' for the
theorising of organisations, which offers, as posssible post-postmodernisms,
feminist theory, narrative analysis, actor-network theory, and post-colonial
theorising.
Callon and Latour (1992), `Don't Throw
the Baby Out with the Bath School! A Reply to Collins and Yearley'
A reply to Collins and Yearley (1992).
Callon and Law (1995), `Agency and the
Hybrid Collectif'
An attempt to review and come to terms with some of the criticisms of actor-network
theory by commentators such as feminists for its tendencies towards centering
and monological form.
Callon and Law (1997), `After the Individual
in Society: Lessons in Collectivity from Science, Technology and Society'
An attempt to review and summarise some of the major preoccupations of actor-network
theory, and relate them critically to sociological theory.
Callon and Law (1997), `LIrruption
des Non-Humains dans les Sciences Humaines: quelques leçons tirées de la sociologie
des sciences et des techniques'
An attempt to review and summarise some of the major preoccupations of actor-network
theory, and relate them critically to sociological theory.
Collins and Yearley (1992), `Epistemological
Chicken'
Argues against the generalised symmetry of actor-network, preferring in the
interpretive sociology tradition to treat humans as ontologically distinct language
carriers (See Callon, 1986b; Callon
and Latour, 1992)
Constant (1999), `Reliable Knowledge
and Unreliable Stuff'
An exploration of the character and limits of constructivist analysis of
engineering and technological knowledge. Argues that these approaches focus
too much on the micro, are unable to theorise the increase of such knowledge,
and proposes a Bayesian model for understanding the increase in reliable knowledge.
See the response by Law and Singleton (2000).
Elam (1997), `Living Dangerously with
Bruno Latour in a Hybrid World'
Notes similarities between Bruno Latours (1993b) use of the notion
of hybridity and the use of the term in US State Department discourse. Argues
that the notion of hybridity is a way of securing the purity of basic terms,
categories.
Engestrom and Escalante (1994), `Postal buddy:
Mundane tool or object of affection? The rise and fall of the postal buddy'
Activity theory study of a failed automation attempt at US post offices.
Employs and critically reviews ANT concepts.
Escobar (1994), `Welcome to cyberia:
Notes on the anthropology of cyberculture'
Uses ANT concepts (and a range of other theoretical traditions) to develop
an anthropology of cyberculture.
Haraway (1991), `A Cyborg Manifesto: Science,
Technology and Socialist Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century'
This is not within the actor-network tradition, and neither does it
comment on it. We include it to point to the similarities and differences between
actor-network and important feminist writing on sociotechnical relations. The
heterogeneity of such relations is assumed in both approaches, but Haraway is
much more explicit (a) about her political commitments, and (b) about the irreducibility
of cyborgs to networks that might be 'captured' and described overall.
Haraway (1994), `A Game of Cat's Cradle:
Science Studies, Feminist Theory, Cultural Studies'
Perhaps the metaphor of network is too restricted? There are untidy relations
that might be understood using other metaphors: for instance, that of the cats
cradle.
Haraway (1997), `Modest_Witness@Second_Millenium.Female_Man©_Meets_Oncomouse:
Feminism and Technoscience,'
Included not because it belongs to actor network theory, but because it is
the best-known example of the different and partially related radical feminist
technoscience alternative to actor-network theory. The 'after-ANT' studies in
this resource in many cases owe as much or more to Haraway as to ANT itself.
Kaghan and Phillips (1998), `Building
the Tower of Babel: Communities of Practice and Paradigmatic Pluralism in Organization
Studies'
The paper compares reductionist and irreductionist interpretations of the
work of Thomas Kuhn. The paper argues that the organization studies community
would benefit from paying greater attention to the irreductionist interpretations
found in ANT and other schools in science and technology studies.
Latour (1999), `On Recalling ANT'
Like a faulty car, ANT needs to be recalled since all of its main terms (actor,
network and theory) are flawed, or at least are too easily misunderstood. It
is best seen as a theory of space or circulation in a non-modern situation.
Law (1991), `Introduction: Monsters, Machines
and Sociotechnical Relations'
An attempt to link the distributions of concern to sociology (such as class
and gender), with those (such as the human/non-human divide) that have been
explored in STS including actor-network theory.
Law and Singleton (2000), `Performing
Technology's Stories'
A commentary on Constant's analysis of the failings of constructivism. Suggests
that ANT and feminist technoscience analyses owe less to construction than a
turn to performance.
Law (2000), `Objects, Spaces, Others'
Considers the spatial implications of networks, regions and fluids, and argues
that objects may be understood as interferences between different spatial systems.
Law (2000), `Networks, Relations,
Cyborgs: on the Social Study of Technology'
In an 'after actor-network' mode, argues that networks should not be understood
as centred and functional in character. It is relations that are crucial, and
these may be understood in partial and incompletely centred modes.
Lee and Brown (1994), `Otherness and
the Actor Network: the Undiscovered Continent'
A sympathetic but critical commentary of the tendency of actor-network theory
to colonise or homogenise the 'Other', and therefore deny to this its otherness.
This also implies that actor-network studies often enough take a 'God-eye' view.
Michael (1998), `Co(a)gency and the car:
Attributing Agency in the Case of the 'Road Rage''
Where is agency located? How is it attributed? Michael looks at the hybrid
actor of the driver and the motor car for the case of road rage.
Nowotny (1990), `Actor-networks vs.
science as self-organizing system: A comparative view of two constructivist
approaches'
Critically reviews two constructivist traditions that attempt to explain
science: ANT and Complexity Theory.
Star (1991), `Power, Technologies and
the Phenomenology of Conventions: on being Allergic to Onions'
If we are all heterogeneous engineers, then some find that this is much more
difficult to accomplish than others. This engages with the tendency of 1980s
actor-network studies to explore the strategies of the powerful, rather than
attending to the difficulties of women, people of colour, or others who do not
conform to the standard conventions.
Strathern (1996), `Cutting the Network'
Not primarily about actor-network, this raises important questions about
the character of relatedness, and the neutrality of the notion of 'network'
as a descriptor.
Suchman (2000), `Human/Machine Reconsidered'
Links the ethnomethodological concern with situated knowledges to a reconsideration
of non-human agency in work practices.
Akrich and Latour (1992), `A Summary of a Convenient Vocabulary for the Semiotics
of Human and Nonhuman Assemblies'
A concise description of a possible semiotic vocabulary for undertaking symmetrical
studies of the relations between entities, and thus the ways in which these
are constituted.
Bowers (1992), `The politics of formalism'
Draws on ANT to describe the inherently political nature of artefacts, especially
information technologies. Also a useful introduction to ANT concepts such as
immutable mobiles, obligatory passage ponts, etc.
Brown (1992), `Organization studies and
scientific authority'
A review of ANT in organisation stuies from a methodological perspective.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999), `La
Leçon d'Humanité de Gino'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Escobar (1994), `Welcome to cyberia:
Notes on the anthropology of cyberculture'
Uses ANT concepts (and a range of other theoretical traditions) to develop
an anthropology of cyberculture.
Kaghan and Phillips (1998), `Building
the Tower of Babel: Communities of Practice and Paradigmatic Pluralism in Organization
Studies'
The paper compares reductionist and irreductionist interpretations of the
work of Thomas Kuhn. The paper argues that the organization studies community
would benefit from paying greater attention to the irreductionist interpretations
found in ANT and other schools in science and technology studies.
Latour (1987), `Science in Action: How to Follow
Scientists and Engineers Through Society'
The only ANT textbook? - though the extent to which Latour uses the notion
of 'actor-network' is limited. Nevertheless, an important account of the method,
in particular in its application to science and technology.
Latour (1988), `The Politics of Explanation:
an Alternative'
Exploration of reflexivity. Rejects the idea that this is self-contradictory,
but also rejects the approach of most reflexivists, arguing for a modest 'infra-reflexivity'.
Latour, Mauguin et al. (1992), `A Note
on Socio-Technical Graphs'
Extends the sociology of translation, and in particular the arguments of
Latour (1987) to the field of scientometrics.
Law (2000), `On the Subject of the
Object: Narrative, Technology and Interpellation'
Explores the relations between subjectivity and objectivity in an after ANT
mode, in part by using Althusser's notion of interpellation.
Akrich (1992), `The De-Scription of Technical Objects'
A study of the ways in which competences and attributes are attributed to
agencies and artefacts in a study of third world electrification, and which,
as a result, stabilise a sociotechnical network.
Akrich and Pasveer (1998), `Narrating
Childbirth'
Explores different narratives of childbirth and their distribution of agency
and mediation. 'After' ANT.
Brenna, Law et al. (1998), `Machines, Agency
and Desire,'
A collection of essays on materialities, desires and technologies, influenced
by a variety of (mostly post-structuralist) theoretical approaches, including
actor-network theory. It concludes contributions by Anni Dugdale, Celia Lury,
Mike Michael, Ingunn Moser and John Law, and Bernike Pasveer and Madeleine Akrich.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1998),
`Reconfiguring Trajectories: Agencies, Bodies and Political Articulations: the
Case of Muscular Dystrophies'
Explores the configurations of bodies, materials and collectivities involved
in the disabilities of certain muscular dystrophies. An example of 'after ANT'
at work which combines ANT concerns with some of the insights of phenomenology
Callon (1998), `An Essay on Framing and
Overflowing: Economic Externalities Revisited by Sociology'
Introduces useful new terminology for exploring the simplifications that
are implicit in the formation of economic (and any other) actors.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999),
`Gino's Lesson on Humanity'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999), `La
Leçon d'Humanité de Gino'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Cussins (1998), `Ontological Choreography
Agency for Women Patients in an Infertility Clinic'
Draws on actor-network theory and a range of other theoretical resources
to explore the way in which agency, corporeality and technologies are ordered
in an infertility clinic. Argues that medical technologies are not necessarily
dehumanising.
Latour (1988), `The Pasteurization of France'
A large-scale semiotic analysis of 'Pasteur' who is understood as a set of
strategies, arrangements and mobilisations of different entities into a more
or less coherent and more or less fragile network, of which Pasteur the person
is a spokesperson. Accordingly, Pasteur is an effect, rather than a prime mover,
an individual genius.
Law (2000), `On the Subject of the
Object: Narrative, Technology and Interpellation'
Explores the relations between subjectivity and objectivity in an after ANT
mode, in part by using Althusser's notion of interpellation.
Law and Moser (1999), `Managing, Subjectivities
and Desires'
Explores the male-gendering of managers in a formalorganisation, arguing
that there are multiple forms of male performance.
Michael (1998), `Co(a)gency and the car:
Attributing Agency in the Case of the 'Road Rage''
Where is agency located? How is it attributed? Michael looks at the hybrid
actor of the driver and the motor car for the case of road rage.
Mol and Law (2001), `Situated Bodies and
Distributed Selves: on Doing Hypoglycaemia'
Explores the performances of hypoglycaemia in diabetes, arguing that these
are multiple, and correspondingly generate multiple bodily (and other material)
specificities, and multiple 'selves'.
Moser and Law (1998), `'Making Voices':
Disability, Technology and Articulation'
On the implications of material heterogeneity for subjectivities in disability,
and the notion of 'voices' or representations. After ANT
Moser and Law (1998), `Notes on Desire,
Complexity, Inclusion'
Using Deleuze and Guattari's distinction between rhizome and arborescence,
argues that desire as lack and desire as intensity are mutually dependent.
Moser and Law (1999), `Good Passages,
Bad Passages'
An analysis of the materiality of dis/ability, which explores the multiplicity
of such dis/ablings, the ways in which these link together, and the manner in
which they perform subjectivities.
Suchman (2000), `Organizing Alignment:
a Case of Bridge Building'
Explores the human and non-human engineering work and practices involved
in the design of a bridge.
Singleton (2000), `Made on Location:
public health and subjectivities'
Explores the partially connected performances which both alter and at the
same time reaffirm public health advice for the case of sudden infant death
syndrome.
Ashmore (1993), `Behaviour Modification of a Catflap: a contribution to the
Sociology of Things'
An analysis, in equal measure rigorous and humorous, which explores the extent
to which is possible to sustain generalised symmetry between a cat, a person
and a catflap.
Brown (1998), `Ordering Hope: Representations
of Xentransplantation - and Actor/Actant Network Theory Account'
An account of xenotransplantation, posed both in narrative and in actor-network
terms.
Callon (1986), `Some Elements of a Sociology
of Translation: Domestication of the Scallops and the Fishermen of Saint Brieuc
Bay'
One of the most discussed papers in actor-network theory. This presses 'symmetry'
between different entities including fishermen, various technologies, and scallops.
Much commented on, much criticised. (See Collins and
Yearley (1992))
Callon (1999), `Some Elements of a Sociology
of Translation: Domestication of the Scallops and the Fishermen of Saint Brieuc
Bay'
A reprint of the article previously published in 1986.
Latour (1988), `The Pasteurization of France'
A large-scale semiotic analysis of 'Pasteur' who is understood as a set of
strategies, arrangements and mobilisations of different entities into a more
or less coherent and more or less fragile network, of which Pasteur the person
is a spokesperson. Accordingly, Pasteur is an effect, rather than a prime mover,
an individual genius.
Latour (1999), `Politiques de la Nature: Comment
faire entrer les sciences en démocratie'
A successor to 'We Have Never Been Modern', which explores the possible character
of a non-modern constitution which would dissolve the distinction between facts
and values (science and politics) with a more flexible and revisable process
in which what is and what is good (and can live together) are negotiated. This
book will appear in translation in English in 2000 or 2001.
Hennion (1989), `An Intermediary between Production and Consumption: the Producer
of Popular Music'
Chains of translations produce, or demand, intermediaries. This is explored
for the case of popular music.
Hennion (1996), `Les Jambes d'Hercule:
Des Oeuvres et du Gout'
Tastes change, notions of authenticity change: the result is that the notion
of what counts as an authentic work of art is also displaced. The cellars of
museums are now full of Roman sculptures that have lost favour with the curators.
'After-actor network'.
Bowers (1992), `The politics of formalism'
Draws on ANT to describe the inherently political nature of artefacts, especially
information technologies. Also a useful introduction to ANT concepts such as
immutable mobiles, obligatory passage ponts, etc.
Bowker (1988), `Pictures from the Subsoil,
1939'
An empirical and theoretical study of the juggling of representational ambiguity
for strategic reasons. Is quite strongly informed by actor-network assumptions,
though not reducible to these.
Callon (2001), `Writing and (Re)writing
Devices as Tools for Managing Complexity'
Explores the ways in which textual technologies iteratively constitute supply
and demand (consumers) for two classes of enterprises.
Hutchins (1995), `Cognition in the Wild'
Detailed study of the organisational and material aspects of navigation on
a navy vessel. Not ANT - this study is located within a cognitive anthropology/distributed
cognition framework - but similar in many ways in its crossing of allegedly
obvious boundaries between the human and the non-human.
Latour (1990), `Drawing Things Together'
Set up as a discussion of the division between 'the West' and 'the rest',
this article rejects the idea that there was a decisive event or moment which
led to the division, but instead locates this in a series of small technologies
which generated simplified and manipulable representations or 'immutable mobiles'
which thereby generated centres of control. These include printing, cartography
and visual depiction. The argument is somewhat reminiscent of Michel Foucault's
understanding of surveillance in the disciplinary or modern episteme.
Law and Benschop (1997), `Resisting Pictures:
Representation, Distribution and Ontological Politics'
Considers the ways in which subjects and objects are constituted in representations,
arguing that such relations are not given in the order of things. 'After actor-network'.
Turnbull (1993), `Maps are Territories, Science
is an Atlas'
Related to some concerns of actor-network theory, and drawing on it in part,
this is a study of the conventional character of cartographic representation.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1998), `Reconfiguring Trajectories: Agencies, Bodies
and Political Articulations: the Case of Muscular Dystrophies'
Explores the configurations of bodies, materials and collectivities involved
in the disabilities of certain muscular dystrophies. An example of 'after ANT'
at work which combines ANT concerns with some of the insights of phenomenology
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999),
`Gino's Lesson on Humanity'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999), `La
Leçon d'Humanité de Gino'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1998), `Articulating
Bodies: the Case of Muscular Dystrophies'
Explores muscular dystrophy by considering how the 'collective patient' is
created and reshaped in the course of tests and trials which extend from the
flesh through technologies to other persons and organisations. The body, it
is argued, can only be understood by examining such trials.
Moser and Law (1998), `'Making Voices':
Disability, Technology and Articulation'
On the implications of material heterogeneity for subjectivities in disability,
and the notion of 'voices' or representations. After ANT
Moser and Law (1999), `Good Passages,
Bad Passages'
An analysis of the materiality of dis/ability, which explores the multiplicity
of such dis/ablings, the ways in which these link together, and the manner in
which they perform subjectivities.
Moser and Law (1998), `Notes on Desire,
Complexity, Inclusion'
Using Deleuze and Guattari's distinction between rhizome and arborescence,
argues that desire as lack and desire as intensity are mutually dependent.
Stollmeijer, Harbers et al. (1999),
`Food Matters: Arguments for an ethnography of daily care'
An account of food and death by starvation in patients suffering from senile
dementia which explores the legal and medical discourses before considering
the material complexities of regimes of care and the possibility that particular
objects and practices have 'merits' or 'virtues' which might be used in a non-normative
ethics.
Winance (1999), `Trying out
the Wheelchair: the Mutual Shaping of People and Devices Through Adustment'
Carefully explores the way in which a person with muscular dystrophy and
a wheelchair are mutually adgusted to produce an assemblage which departs from
both in their initial conditions.
Callon (1998), `The Laws of the Markets'
An edited volume on the creation of markets, bringing together authors from
a variety of theoretical traditions. Most are concerned with the material construction
of markets - and market-related subjectivities. 'After ANT'.
Callon (1999), `Actor-Network Theory:
the Market Test'
How might the actor-network approach be applied to such seemingly simple
forms of agency as that of economic actor in the market?
Callon (1998), `An Essay on Framing and
Overflowing: Economic Externalities Revisited by Sociology'
Introduces useful new terminology for exploring the simplifications that
are implicit in the formation of economic (and any other) actors.
Callon (2001), `Writing and (Re)writing
Devices as Tools for Managing Complexity'
Explores the ways in which textual technologies iteratively constitute supply
and demand (consumers) for two classes of enterprises.
Berg (1996), `Digital Feminism'
A study of the relationships between gendering and technologies, especially
information technologies, which draws in part on actor-network theory, though
more extensively on feminist writing, and on the social construction of technology.
Dugdale (1999), `Materiality: Juggling
Sameness and Difference'
How is 'closure' achieved, for instance in policy? Examining the case of
the IUD in Australia, this paper suggests that it does not imply coming to rest,but
rather an oscillation, performed in material circumstances, between singularity
and multiplicity.
Law and Moser (1999), `Managing, Subjectivities
and Desires'
Explores the male-gendering of managers in a formalorganisation, arguing
that there are multiple forms of male performance.
Singleton (1993), `Science, Women and Ambivalence:
an Actor-Network Analysis of the Cervical Screening Campaign'
Combines resources from actor-network theory and feminism to explore the
ambivalences that are built into, and help to constitute, the British Cervical
Screening Programme.
Singleton and Michael (1993), `Actor-networks
and Ambivalence: General Practitioners in the UK Cervical Screening Programme'
Argues against the centering tendencies of 1980s actor-network theory, to
suggest that decentering and indeed inconsistency or ambivalence are do not
necessarily detract from the overall cohesion of a network
Singleton (1996), `Feminism, Sociology
of Scientific Knowledge and Postmodernism: Politics, Theory and Me'
How to think about 'decisions' in a world where there is endless undecidability
and ambivalence.
Singleton (2000), `Made on Location:
public health and subjectivities'
Explores the partially connected performances which both alter and at the
same time reaffirm public health advice for the case of sudden infant death
syndrome.
Anderson (1994), `Representations and requirements: The value of ethnography
in system design'
A critical analysis of computer scientists` misunderstandings of ethnography.
Uses ANT and ethnomethodology to show the importance of materiality in ethnographic
accounts.
Bowers (1992), `The politics of formalism'
Draws on ANT to describe the inherently political nature of artefacts, especially
information technologies. Also a useful introduction to ANT concepts such as
immutable mobiles, obligatory passage ponts, etc.
Hutchins (1995), `Cognition in the Wild'
Detailed study of the organisational and material aspects of navigation on
a navy vessel. Not ANT - this study is located within a cognitive anthropology/distributed
cognition framework - but similar in many ways in its crossing of allegedly
obvious boundaries between the human and the non-human.
Latour (1988), `Mixing humans and nonhumans
together: The sociology of a door-closer'
Latour, writing as Jim Johnson, performs a rather humorous introduction to
key concerns of ANT.
Latour (1991), `Technology is Society
Made Durable'
How is society sustained if networks are precarious? The answer lies in the
different durability of different materials. Technologies embody social relations:
they may be understood as translations of those relations into different material
forms.
Latour (1992), `Where are the Missing
Masses? Sociology of a Few Mundane Artefacts'
There are no purely 'social' relations. Instead, there are 'socio-technical'
relations, embedded in and performed by a whole range of different materials,
human, technical, 'natural', textual.
Law and Mol (1995), `Notes on Materiality
and Sociality'
Explores a semiotic understanding of materiality: that it is a product of
relations between entities which thereby achieve their material form. Traces
this through actor-network theory to the less coherent materialities which are
implied in the postructuralist fragmentation that follows the 'loss' of grand
narrative.
Suchman (2000), `Organizing Alignment:
a Case of Bridge Building'
Explores the human and non-human engineering work and practices involved
in the design of a bridge.
Winance (1999), `Trying out
the Wheelchair: the Mutual Shaping of People and Devices Through Adustment'
Carefully explores the way in which a person with muscular dystrophy and
a wheelchair are mutually adgusted to produce an assemblage which departs from
both in their initial conditions.
Akrich and Pasveer (1996), `Comment la Naissance Vient aux Femmes: le Technique
de l'accouchement en France et aux Pays Bas'
After actor network! A comparative study of pregnancy and childbirth in the
Netherlands and France, which uses a symmetrical approach to explore the relations
which constitute subjectivity, corporeality and technology in the two countries.
Akrich and Pasveer (1998), `Narrating
Childbirth'
Explores different narratives of childbirth and their distribution of agency
and mediation. 'After' ANT.
Berg (1997), `Rationalizing Medical Work: Decision
Support Techniques and Medical Practices'
A study of the relationship between medical decision support techniques and
the local practices of physicians and others. Draws on actor-network theory.
Bloomfield (1991), `The role of information
systems in the UK National Health Service: Action at a distance and the fetish
of calculation'
Case study that used ANT ideas to describe the politics of information technology
to change the NHS.
Brown (1998), `Ordering Hope: Representations
of Xentransplantation - and Actor/Actant Network Theory Account'
An account of xenotransplantation, posed both in narrative and in actor-network
terms.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1998),
`Reconfiguring Trajectories: Agencies, Bodies and Political Articulations: the
Case of Muscular Dystrophies'
Explores the configurations of bodies, materials and collectivities involved
in the disabilities of certain muscular dystrophies. An example of 'after ANT'
at work which combines ANT concerns with some of the insights of phenomenology
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999),
`Gino's Lesson on Humanity'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999), `La
Leçon d'Humanité de Gino'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1998), `Articulating
Bodies: the Case of Muscular Dystrophies'
Explores muscular dystrophy by considering how the 'collective patient' is
created and reshaped in the course of tests and trials which extend from the
flesh through technologies to other persons and organisations. The body, it
is argued, can only be understood by examining such trials.
Cussins (1998), `Ontological Choreography
Agency for Women Patients in an Infertility Clinic'
Draws on actor-network theory and a range of other theoretical resources
to explore the way in which agency, corporeality and technologies are ordered
in an infertility clinic. Argues that medical technologies are not necessarily
dehumanising.
Dugdale (1999), `Materiality: Juggling
Sameness and Difference'
How is 'closure' achieved, for instance in policy? Examining the case of
the IUD in Australia, this paper suggests that it does not imply coming to rest,but
rather an oscillation, performed in material circumstances, between singularity
and multiplicity.
Garrety (1997), `Social Worlds, Actor-Networks
and Controversy: The Case of Cholesterol, Dietary Fat and Heart Disease'
Compares ANT and symbolic interactionism as theories for explaining protracted
controversies. Argues that the latter is better able to accommodate actants
such as cholesterol, that remain elusive and ambiguous despite many attempts
at enrolment.
Law and Singleton (2000), `This is
Not an Object'
Explores an object (alcoholic liver disease) which turns out to be enacted
in different locations in different ways overlapping and partially connected
performances. It is argued that this means that it is not an object
Mol (1998), `Missing Links, Making Links:
the Performance of Some Artheroscleroses'
'After actor-network', rather than ANT. Explores the material specificities
of different atheroscleroses, to make the point that these are multiple - that
the object is decentred - and that these different object-positions are more
or less well linked in the arrangements of the hospital.
Mol and Berg (1994), `Principles and
Practices of Medicine: the Coexistence of Various Anaemias'
'After actor-network', rather than ANT. Explores the specificities and the
relations between different anaemias.
Mol and Elsman (1996), `Detecting Disease
and Designing Treatment. Duplex and the Diagnosis of Diseased Leg Vessels'
Explores the differences between two methods for performing atherosclerosis,
and the ways in which these are related in practice in a hospital.
Mol and Law (1994), `Regions, Networks
and Fluids: Anaemia and Social Topology'
A topological analysis of the spatial forms performed in the disease 'anaemia',
distinguishing between regions, (actor-)networks, and proposing a further topographical
form, that of the fluid. Argues that practices are multi-spatial.
Mol and Mesman (1996), `Neonatal Food
and the Politics of Theory: Some Questions of Method'
A methodological, theoretical and political comparison of symbolic interaction
(which follows people) and semiotics (or actor-network theory) which may also
follow inanimate objects - such as food.
Mol (1997), `Wat is Kiezen? Een Empirisch-Filosophische
Verkenning'
Inaugural lecture on 'what is choosing?' which explores the implications
of distributed 'decisions' in a world of multiplicity for the case of medicine.
Mol (2001), `The Body Multiple: Artherosclerosis
in Practice'
'After actor-network', rather than ANT. On the multiplicity of objects, the
distribution of difference performances over different sites, the forms of co-ordination
between them and their different dependencies.
Mol and Law (2001), `Situated Bodies and
Distributed Selves: on Doing Hypoglycaemia'
Explores the performances of hypoglycaemia in diabetes, arguing that these
are multiple, and correspondingly generate multiple bodily (and other material)
specificities, and multiple 'selves'.
Mol (2001), `Cutting surgeons, walking
patients: Some complexities involved in comparing'
Comparison as an effect of specific and loal practices which perform sets
of assumptions, but which are nevertheless partially connected.
Pasveer (1992), `Shadows of Knowledge: making
a representing practice in medicine: x-ray pictures and pulmonary tuberculosis,
1895-1930'
Uses a variety of theoretical resources, including actor-network theory,
to trace the processes by which new entities were constitute in and through
radiography.
Pasveer and Akrich (1996), `How Children are
Born: Technologies of Giving Birth in France and the Netherlands'
A summary in English of the study reported in Akrich
and Pasveer (1996).
Prout (1996), `ANT, technology and
medial sociology: An illustrative analysis of the metered dose inhaler'
A study that introduces ANT to a medical sociology audience by analysing
a medical artefact used to treat asthma.
Singleton (1993), `Science, Women and Ambivalence:
an Actor-Network Analysis of the Cervical Screening Campaign'
Combines resources from actor-network theory and feminism to explore the
ambivalences that are built into, and help to constitute, the British Cervical
Screening Programme.
Singleton (1996), `Feminism, Sociology
of Scientific Knowledge and Postmodernism: Politics, Theory and Me'
How to think about 'decisions' in a world where there is endless undecidability
and ambivalence.
Singleton and Michael (1993), `Actor-networks
and Ambivalence: General Practitioners in the UK Cervical Screening Programme'
Argues against the centering tendencies of 1980s actor-network theory, to
suggest that decentering and indeed inconsistency or ambivalence are do not
necessarily detract from the overall cohesion of a network
Singleton (2000), `Made on Location:
public health and subjectivities'
Explores the partially connected performances which both alter and at the
same time reaffirm public health advice for the case of sudden infant death
syndrome.
Willems (1998), `Inhaling Drugs and Making
Worlds: a Proliferation of Lungs and Asthmas'
Drugs produce similarities and differences, defining diseases and reorganising
the body. A study in performance and multiplicity.
Anderson (1994), `Representations and requirements: The value of ethnography
in system design'
A critical analysis of computer scientists` misunderstandings of ethnography.
Uses ANT and ethnomethodology to show the importance of materiality in ethnographic
accounts.
Bowers (1992), `The politics of formalism'
Draws on ANT to describe the inherently political nature of artefacts, especially
information technologies. Also a useful introduction to ANT concepts such as
immutable mobiles, obligatory passage ponts, etc.
Brown and Duguid (1994), `Borderline
issues: Social and material aspects of design'
Key paper of special issue on Context in Design. Uses ANT only marginally
but gives an critical review of similar theoretical approaches to the social,
material and political aspects of information technologies.
Callon (2001), `Writing and (Re)writing
Devices as Tools for Managing Complexity'
Explores the ways in which textual technologies iteratively constitute supply
and demand (consumers) for two classes of enterprises.
Cooper (1992), `Formal Organization as
Representation: Remote Control, Displacement and Abbreviation'
An analysis of organisation, or modes of organising, which draws on actor-network
theory, and in particular the analysis of centres of calculation developed by
Bruno Latour. See Latour (1990)
Cooper and Law (1995), `Organization: Distal
and Proximal Views'
Organisations may be seen both as discrete and bounded entities (the 'distal')
and as continuous and fuzzy processes (the 'proximal'). The latter are related
to the network processes of actor-network theory.
Gherardi and Nicolini (2000), `To Transfer
is to Transform: the Circulation of Safety Knowledge'
An empirical and theoretical account of organisational decisionmaking, which
uses, in part, actor-network theory. See the commentary by Law (2000).
Kaghan and Phillips (1998), `Building
the Tower of Babel: Communities of Practice and Paradigmatic Pluralism in Organization
Studies'
The paper compares reductionist and irreductionist interpretations of the
work of Thomas Kuhn. The paper argues that the organization studies community
would benefit from paying greater attention to the irreductionist interpretations
found in ANT and other schools in science and technology studies.
Latour (1996), `Social theory and the
study of computerized work sites'
Reviews developments in social theory and information technology. Uses actor
network ideas and studies but also refers to other important theoretical influences
in the context of new information technologies.
Law (1994), `Organizing Modernity'
An organisational ethnography of the management of a large scientific laboratory
which is also a theoretical exploration of the links between actor-network theory
and other theoretical traditions including Foucauldianism and symbolic interaction.
It is also critical of the tendency towards managerialism and 'centering' of
some parts of actor-network theory.
Law and Moser (1999), `Managing, Subjectivities
and Desires'
Explores the male-gendering of managers in a formalorganisation, arguing
that there are multiple forms of male performance.
Law (2000), `Comment on Suchman, and
Gherardi and Nicolini: Knowing as Displacing'
In a comment on Suchman (2000) and Gherardi and Nicolini (2000), explores
the character of organisational knowing from a monadological point of view,
distinguishing between 'knowing as distinction', and 'knowing as obsurity'.
Star (1992), `The Trojan door: Organizations,
work, and the 'open Black Box''
One of the earliest 'After Actor Network' papers: Draws on a variety of theoretical
traditions which form a promising assemblage of ideas for studying organisation,
technology and work.
Suchman (2000), `Organizing Alignment:
a Case of Bridge Building'
Explores the human and non-human engineering work and practices involved
in the design of a bridge.
Barry (2001), `In the middle of the network'
Explores the uses of network metaphors and practices in the creation of the
European community.
Bloomfield and Vurdubakis (1994), `Boundary
disputes: Negotiating the boundary between the technical and the social in the
development of IT systems'
Uses ideas of actor network theory to explain the continuous renegotiation
between thesocial and the technical when information technology systems are
designed.
Bowers (1992), `The politics of formalism'
Draws on ANT to describe the inherently political nature of artefacts, especially
information technologies. Also a useful introduction to ANT concepts such as
immutable mobiles, obligatory passage ponts, etc.
Brown and Duguid (1994), `Borderline
issues: Social and material aspects of design'
Key paper of special issue on Context in Design. Uses ANT only marginally
but gives an critical review of similar theoretical approaches to the social,
material and political aspects of information technologies.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999),
`Gino's Lesson on Humanity'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999), `La
Leçon d'Humanité de Gino'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
de Laet and Mol (2000), `The Zimbabwe
Bush Pump: Mechanics of a Fluid Technology'
Considers a 'fluid technology', and treats its strength as a function of
that fluidity rather than a structured and stable network.
Dugdale (1999), `Materiality: Juggling
Sameness and Difference'
How is 'closure' achieved, for instance in policy? Examining the case of
the IUD in Australia, this paper suggests that it does not imply coming to rest,but
rather an oscillation, performed in material circumstances, between singularity
and multiplicity.
Elam (1997), `Living Dangerously with
Bruno Latour in a Hybrid World'
Notes similarities between Bruno Latours (1993b) use of the notion
of hybridity and the use of the term in US State Department discourse. Argues
that the notion of hybridity is a way of securing the purity of basic terms,
categories.
Latour (1999), `Politiques de la Nature: Comment
faire entrer les sciences en démocratie'
A successor to 'We Have Never Been Modern', which explores the possible character
of a non-modern constitution which would dissolve the distinction between facts
and values (science and politics) with a more flexible and revisable process
in which what is and what is good (and can live together) are negotiated. This
book will appear in translation in English in 2000 or 2001.
Law (2000), `Objects, Spaces, Others'
Considers the spatial implications of networks, regions and fluids, and argues
that objects may be understood as interferences between different spatial systems.
Law and Singleton (2000), `Performing
Technology's Stories'
A commentary on Constant's analysis of the failings of constructivism. Suggests
that ANT and feminist technoscience analyses owe less to construction than a
turn to performance.
Mol and Mesman (1996), `Neonatal Food
and the Politics of Theory: Some Questions of Method'
A methodological, theoretical and political comparison of symbolic interaction
(which follows people) and semiotics (or actor-network theory) which may also
follow inanimate objects - such as food.
Mol (1999), `Ontological Politics: a Word
and Some Questions'
How are worlds, realities, performed into being? This is an ANT question.
Here an 'ontological politics' is imagined.
Star (1991), `Power, Technologies and
the Phenomenology of Conventions: on being Allergic to Onions'
If we are all heterogeneous engineers, then some find that this is much more
difficult to accomplish than others. This engages with the tendency of 1980s
actor-network studies to explore the strategies of the powerful, rather than
attending to the difficulties of women, people of colour, or others who do not
conform to the standard conventions.
Bowers (1992), `The politics of formalism'
Draws on ANT to describe the inherently political nature of artefacts, especially
information technologies. Also a useful introduction to ANT concepts such as
immutable mobiles, obligatory passage ponts, etc.
Clegg (1989), `Frameworks of Power'
An analysis of the sociological literature on power which develops a general
theory which draws in certain respects strongly on actor-network theory.
Latour (1986), `The Powers of Association'
Develops a translation model of power, in which it is argued that power is
an performative effect, a product of associating entities together, rather than
something which is possessed by actors.
Latour (1999), `Politiques de la Nature: Comment
faire entrer les sciences en démocratie'
A successor to 'We Have Never Been Modern', which explores the possible character
of a non-modern constitution which would dissolve the distinction between facts
and values (science and politics) with a more flexible and revisable process
in which what is and what is good (and can live together) are negotiated. This
book will appear in translation in English in 2000 or 2001.
Law (1986), `On Power and Its Tactics:
a View from the Sociology of Science'
An empirical and theoretical account of the ways in which allies are assembled
into networks in a scientific laboratory in order to produce texts which may
then be transported to other sites. Explores the tactics or the strategies of
power and domination.
Law (1986), `On the Methods of Long Distance
Control: Vessels, Navigation and the Portuguese Route to India'
An account of the precarious networks of global domination as these were
elaborated by the Portuguese in the 15th and 16th centuries. Draws on and exemplifies
Bruno Latour's notion of 'immutable mobile', by examining maritime and navigational
technologies.
Law (1991), `Power, Discretion and Strategy'
Links the sociology of power (including 'power to' and 'power over') with
the textures of power, as explored by Michel Foucault and by actor-network theory.
Thrift (1996), `Spatial Formations'
Uses actor-network theory, together with a wide range of other resources,
to explore the character of geographical spatiality, often in relation to power
and distribution.
de Andrade and Gonçalves (1995), `Os Acelerados Lineares do General Argus e
a sua Rede Technocientífíca'
An account of the development of linear accelerator projects in Brazil in
the 1960s and 1970s, exploring decisionmaking, heterogeneity, and their eventual
destablisation.
Latour and Woolgar (1979), `Laboratory Life: the
Social Construction of Scientific Facts'
The first major study of the building of facts in a laboratory in any theoretical
tradition, and a landmark book in the sociology of science. Written before the
term 'actor-network' was invented, and drawing on a range of resources including
semiotics and ethnomethodology, it nonetheless catches important ANT moves,
for instance in its account of the ways in which facts move through modalities
as they gather allies to become more and more solid - and less and less attached
to the contingencies which generated them in the first place.
Latour (1988), `The Pasteurization of France'
A large-scale semiotic analysis of 'Pasteur' who is understood as a set of
strategies, arrangements and mobilisations of different entities into a more
or less coherent and more or less fragile network, of which Pasteur the person
is a spokesperson. Accordingly, Pasteur is an effect, rather than a prime mover,
an individual genius.
Latour (1999), `Give Me a Laboratory and
I will Raise the World'
Reprint of the paper which originally appeared in 1983
Law (1986), `On Power and Its Tactics:
a View from the Sociology of Science'
An empirical and theoretical account of the ways in which allies are assembled
into networks in a scientific laboratory in order to produce texts which may
then be transported to other sites. Explores the tactics or the strategies of
power and domination.
Nowotny (1990), `Actor-networks vs.
science as self-organizing system: A comparative view of two constructivist
approaches'
Critically reviews two constructivist traditions that attempt to explain
science: ANT and Complexity Theory.
Pickering (1995), `The Mangle of Practice: Time,
Agency and Science'
Not an actor-network study - but is included because it shows another, in
some ways comparable, approach at work, in which objects, persons and technologies
are all treated as malleable.
Callon, Law et al. (1986), `Mapping the Dynamics of Science and Technology:
Sociology of Science in the Real World'
A collection of papers which offers theoretical grounding for the co-word
method of mapping the relationship between concepts and actors in science and
technology, locating this in actor-network theory.
Callon (1993), `Variety and irreversibility
in networks of technique conception and adoption'
Reviews different network approaches to the study of variety and irreversibility
in technique conceptio and adoption.
Latour, Mauguin et al. (1992), `A Note
on Socio-Technical Graphs'
Extends the sociology of translation, and in particular the arguments of
Latour (1987) to the field of scientometrics.
Teil and Latour (1995), `The Hume
Machine: Can Association Networks Do More Than Formal Rules?'
Another attempt of a scientometric approach to describing associations -
draws on ANT to a crtain extent but is rather 'After Actor Network'.
de Laet and Mol (2000), `The Zimbabwe Bush Pump: Mechanics of a Fluid Technology'
Considers a 'fluid technology', and treats its strength as a function of
that fluidity rather than a structured and stable network.
Hetherington and Law (2000), `After Networks:
Special Issue of Society and Space'
A collection of articles in an 'after network' mode, with special reference
to spatiality and movement.
Law (1992), `The Olympus 320 Engine:
a Case Study in Design, Development, and Organisational Control'
A further study of heterogeneous sociotechnical networks, attending to the
spatiality and scale effects of such networks, as well as to their disruption.
Law and Mol (1998), `On Metrics and Fluids:
Notes on Otherness'
An empirical study of the topological differences between counting and specificity
on the one hand, and uncountable continuities on the other. A study, therefore,
of 'Otherness' where matters cannot be drawn together and summarised.
Law (1999), `After ANT: Topology, Naming
and Complexity'
'Actor-network' is an oxymoron, the two parts of the term being in tension.
But that tension has often been lost in simplifications. It is recommended that
the tensions of complexities be retained.
Law (2000), `Objects, Spaces, Others'
Considers the spatial implications of networks, regions and fluids, and argues
that objects may be understood as interferences between different spatial systems.
Mol and Law (1994), `Regions, Networks
and Fluids: Anaemia and Social Topology'
A topological analysis of the spatial forms performed in the disease 'anaemia',
distinguishing between regions, (actor-)networks, and proposing a further topographical
form, that of the fluid. Argues that practices are multi-spatial.
Thrift (1996), `Spatial Formations'
Uses actor-network theory, together with a wide range of other resources,
to explore the character of geographical spatiality, often in relation to power
and distribution.
Akrich (1992), `The De-Scription of Technical Objects'
A study of the ways in which competences and attributes are attributed to
agencies and artefacts in a study of third world electrification, and which,
as a result, stabilise a sociotechnical network.
Akrich (1993), `Inscription et Coordination Socio-Techniques:
Anthropologie de Quelques Dispositifs Énergétiques'
An extended study of the development of electricity-related networks in both
Third and First-world contexts.
Bloomfield (1991), `The role of information
systems in the UK National Health Service: Action at a distance and the fetish
of calculation'
Case study that used ANT ideas to describe the politics of information technology
to change the NHS.
Bloomfield and Vurdubakis (1994), `Boundary
disputes: Negotiating the boundary between the technical and the social in the
development of IT systems'
Uses ideas of actor network theory to explain the continuous renegotiation
between thesocial and the technical when information technology systems are
designed.
Bowers (1992), `The politics of formalism'
Draws on ANT to describe the inherently political nature of artefacts, especially
information technologies. Also a useful introduction to ANT concepts such as
immutable mobiles, obligatory passage ponts, etc.
Bowker (1988), `Pictures from the Subsoil,
1939'
An empirical and theoretical study of the juggling of representational ambiguity
for strategic reasons. Is quite strongly informed by actor-network assumptions,
though not reducible to these.
Brown and Duguid (1994), `Borderline
issues: Social and material aspects of design'
Key paper of special issue on Context in Design. Uses ANT only marginally
but gives an critical review of similar theoretical approaches to the social,
material and political aspects of information technologies.
Callon (1980), `Struggles and Negotiations
to define what is Problematic and what is not: the Sociology of Translation'
An early, perhaps the first empirical, example of the 'sociology of translation',
using the case of the véhicule électrique. Derives the term 'translation' from
Michel Serres (1974).
Callon (1986), `The Sociology of an Actor-Network:
the Case of the Electric Vehicle'
A further, more developed, analysis of the véhicule électrique.
Callon (1987), `Society in the Making:
the Study of Technology as a Tool for Sociological Analysis'
A further, more developed, analysis of the case of the véhicule électrique.
In this the notion of the 'engineer sociologist' is developed: the notion that
engineers are engaged in analysing and ordering social relations.
Constant (1999), `Reliable Knowledge
and Unreliable Stuff'
An exploration of the character and limits of constructivist analysis of
engineering and technological knowledge. Argues that these approaches focus
too much on the micro, are unable to theorise the increase of such knowledge,
and proposes a Bayesian model for understanding the increase in reliable knowledge.
See the response by Law and Singleton (2000).
de Laet and Mol (2000), `The Zimbabwe
Bush Pump: Mechanics of a Fluid Technology'
Considers a 'fluid technology', and treats its strength as a function of
that fluidity rather than a structured and stable network.
Dugdale (1999), `Materiality: Juggling
Sameness and Difference'
How is 'closure' achieved, for instance in policy? Examining the case of
the IUD in Australia, this paper suggests that it does not imply coming to rest,but
rather an oscillation, performed in material circumstances, between singularity
and multiplicity.
Engestrom and Escalante (1994), `Postal buddy:
Mundane tool or object of affection? The rise and fall of the postal buddy'
Activity theory study of a failed automation attempt at US post offices.
Employs and critically reviews ANT concepts.
Escobar (1994), `Welcome to cyberia:
Notes on the anthropology of cyberculture'
Uses ANT concepts (and a range of other theoretical traditions) to develop
an anthropology of cyberculture.
Hughes (1986), `The Seamless Web: Technology,
Science Etcetera'
Does not belong to actor-network theory, but is included to show some of
the similarities between the work on large technical systems and ANT - and in
particular, the important of the 'seamless sociotechnical network' to both.
Hutchins (1995), `Cognition in the Wild'
Detailed study of the organisational and material aspects of navigation on
a navy vessel. Not ANT - this study is located within a cognitive anthropology/distributed
cognition framework - but similar in many ways in its crossing of allegedly
obvious boundaries between the human and the non-human.
Hutchins (1995), `How a cockpit remembers
its speed'
Another case study in the distributed cognition tradition which argues -
not unlike ANT - for a rethinking of the 'unit of analysis' we use for analysing
socio-technical systems; in this case the organisation of work on the flightdeck
of a modern aircraft.
Latour (1988), `The Prince for
Machine as well as Machinations'
Where are the missing masses? The argument is that machines are missing from
political and social theory.
Latour (1992), `Aramis, ou l'Amour des Techniques'
A multi-vocal account of a transport technology, in which a range of actors,
including the technology itself, find a voice and debate the translations and
negotiations which led to the final demise of the project.
Latour (1993), `La Clef de Berlin, et autres Leçons
d'un Amateur de Sciences'
A collection of essays on the semiotic approach to association, translation,
and the importance of the technical and machine in what are more commonly thought
of as 'social' relations.
Latour (1993), `Ethnography of a 'high-tech'
case: About Aramis'
A summary of the main theoretical arguments of the ARAMIS case study - in
some ways more focused than the book, especially on the construction of the
concepts of truth, efficieny and productivity in modern science and technology.
Latour (1996), `Aramis, or the Love of Technology'
A translation of Latour (1992a). A multi-vocal account of a transport technology,
in which a range of actors, including the technology itself, find a voice and
debate the translations and negotiations which led to the final demise of the
project.
Latour (1996), `Social theory and the
study of computerized work sites'
Reviews developments in social theory and information technology. Uses actor
network ideas and studies but also refers to other important theoretical influences
in the context of new information technologies.
Latour (1999), `Politiques de la Nature: Comment
faire entrer les sciences en démocratie'
A successor to 'We Have Never Been Modern', which explores the possible character
of a non-modern constitution which would dissolve the distinction between facts
and values (science and politics) with a more flexible and revisable process
in which what is and what is good (and can live together) are negotiated. This
book will appear in translation in English in 2000 or 2001.
Law (1986), `On the Methods of Long Distance
Control: Vessels, Navigation and the Portuguese Route to India'
An account of the precarious networks of global domination as these were
elaborated by the Portuguese in the 15th and 16th centuries. Draws on and exemplifies
Bruno Latour's notion of 'immutable mobile', by examining maritime and navigational
technologies.
Law (1988), `The Anatomy of a Sociotechnical
Struggle: the Design of the TSR2'
A study of the heterogeneous sociotechnical networks in which a military
aircraft was implicated.
Law (1992), `The Olympus 320 Engine:
a Case Study in Design, Development, and Organisational Control'
A further study of heterogeneous sociotechnical networks, attending to the
spatiality and scale effects of such networks, as well as to their disruption.
Law and Callon (1988), `Engineering
and Sociology in a Military Aircraft Project: A Network Analysis of Technical
Change'
Technologies are shaped in and help to perform networks of materially heterogeneous
relations. It is possible to trace these as they evolve, which is done for a
military aircraft in this paper.
Law and Callon (1989), `On the Construction
of Sociotechnical Networks: Content and Context Revisited'
Similar to Law and Callon (1989), except that it is more detailed, and develops
the idea that the technology in question (here an aircraft) has a variable
geometry as the networks in which it is located change their configurations.
Law and Singleton (2000), `Performing
Technology's Stories'
A commentary on Constant's analysis of the failings of constructivism. Suggests
that ANT and feminist technoscience analyses owe less to construction than a
turn to performance.
Moser and Law (1998), `'Making Voices':
Disability, Technology and Articulation'
On the implications of material heterogeneity for subjectivities in disability,
and the notion of 'voices' or representations. After ANT
Moser and Law (1999), `Good Passages,
Bad Passages'
An analysis of the materiality of dis/ability, which explores the multiplicity
of such dis/ablings, the ways in which these link together, and the manner in
which they perform subjectivities.
Moser and Law (1998), `Notes on Desire,
Complexity, Inclusion'
Using Deleuze and Guattari's distinction between rhizome and arborescence,
argues that desire as lack and desire as intensity are mutually dependent.
Suchman (2000), `Organizing Alignment:
a Case of Bridge Building'
Explores the human and non-human engineering work and practices involved
in the design of a bridge.
Winance (1999), `Trying out
the Wheelchair: the Mutual Shaping of People and Devices Through Adustment'
Carefully explores the way in which a person with muscular dystrophy and
a wheelchair are mutually adgusted to produce an assemblage which departs from
both in their initial conditions.
Brown and Duguid (1994), `Borderline issues: Social and material aspects of
design'
Key paper of special issue on Context in Design. Uses ANT only marginally
but gives an critical review of similar theoretical approaches to the social,
material and political aspects of information technologies.
Garrety (1997), `Social Worlds, Actor-Networks
and Controversy: The Case of Cholesterol, Dietary Fat and Heart Disease'
Compares ANT and symbolic interactionism as theories for explaining protracted
controversies. Argues that the latter is better able to accommodate actants
such as cholesterol, that remain elusive and ambiguous despite many attempts
at enrolment.
Singleton (1993), `Science, Women and Ambivalence:
an Actor-Network Analysis of the Cervical Screening Campaign'
Combines resources from actor-network theory and feminism to explore the
ambivalences that are built into, and help to constitute, the British Cervical
Screening Programme.
Singleton and Michael (1993), `Actor-networks
and Ambivalence: General Practitioners in the UK Cervical Screening Programme'
Argues against the centering tendencies of 1980s actor-network theory, to
suggest that decentering and indeed inconsistency or ambivalence are do not
necessarily detract from the overall cohesion of a network
Singleton (2000), `Made on Location:
public health and subjectivities'
Explores the partially connected performances which both alter and at the
same time reaffirm public health advice for the case of sudden infant death
syndrome.
Cooper (1995), `'Assemblage' Notes'
Draws on ANT as one way (among others) of thinking about movement and fractionality.
One of our online documents on these pages.
Law (2001), `Aircraft Stories: Decentering the
Object in Technoscience,'
'After' actor-network, or partially outside it; this builds on a number of
its assumptions to explore 'the problem of difference'. The argument is semiotic:
subjects and objects make themselves together. If this is so, then as Annemarie
Mol has pointed out, there is not an objective world, but rather multiple object
positions. How are they co-ordinated? Do we have the languages we need to make
sense of decentred object which are more than one and less than many?
Mol (1998), `Missing Links, Making Links:
the Performance of Some Artheroscleroses'
'After actor-network', rather than ANT. Explores the material specificities
of different atheroscleroses, to make the point that these are multiple - that
the object is decentred - and that these different object-positions are more
or less well linked in the arrangements of the hospital.
Mol (2001), `The Body Multiple: Artherosclerosis
in Practice'
'After actor-network', rather than ANT. On the multiplicity of objects, the
distribution of difference performances over different sites, the forms of co-ordination
between them and their different dependencies.
Mol (1997), `Wat is Kiezen? Een Empirisch-Filosophische
Verkenning'
Inaugural lecture on 'what is choosing?' which explores the implications
of distributed 'decisions' in a world of multiplicity for the case of medicine.
Mol and Law (2001), `Situated Bodies and
Distributed Selves: on Doing Hypoglycaemia'
Explores the performances of hypoglycaemia in diabetes, arguing that these
are multiple, and correspondingly generate multiple bodily (and other material)
specificities, and multiple 'selves'.
Singleton (2000), `Made on Location:
public health and subjectivities'
Explores the partially connected performances which both alter and at the
same time reaffirm public health advice for the case of sudden infant death
syndrome.
Willems (1998), `Inhaling Drugs and Making
Worlds: a Proliferation of Lungs and Asthmas'
Drugs produce similarities and differences, defining diseases and reorganising
the body. A study in performance and multiplicity.
Calás and Smircich (1999), `Past Postmodernism? Reflections and Tentative Directions'
A clear and concise account of the implications of 'postmodernism' for the
theorising of organisations, which offers, as posssible post-postmodernisms,
feminist theory, narrative analysis, actor-network theory, and post-colonial
theorising.
Law and Mol (1998), `On Metrics and Fluids:
Notes on Otherness'
An empirical study of the topological differences between counting and specificity
on the one hand, and uncountable continuities on the other. A study, therefore,
of 'Otherness' where matters cannot be drawn together and summarised.
Law (2000), `Objects, Spaces, Others'
Considers the spatial implications of networks, regions and fluids, and argues
that objects may be understood as interferences between different spatial systems.
Lee and Brown (1994), `Otherness and
the Actor Network: the Undiscovered Continent'
A sympathetic but critical commentary of the tendency of actor-network theory
to colonise or homogenise the 'Other', and therefore deny to this its otherness.
This also implies that actor-network studies often enough take a 'God-eye' view.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999), `La Leçon d'Humanité de Gino'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Callon and Rabeharisoa (1999),
`Gino's Lesson on Humanity'
An exploration of the implications of interviewing a person with muscular
dystrophy for the character of politics and appropriate political participation.
Suggests that the interview tends to produce a particular form of violent political
participation.
Gomart and Hennion (1999), `A Sociology
of Attachment: Music Amateurs and Drug Addicts'
An 'after ANT' exploration of subjectivity, which explores, for the case
of musical amateurs and drug-users, how subjectivities emerge in generative
'dispositifs' or heterogeneous attachments that are collective and have to do
with objects, techniques and constraints.
Law (2000), `On the Subject of the
Object: Narrative, Technology and Interpellation'
Explores the relations between subjectivity and objectivity in an after ANT
mode, in part by using Althusser's notion of interpellation.
Law and Singleton (2000), `Performing
Technology's Stories'
A commentary on Constant's analysis of the failings of constructivism. Suggests
that ANT and feminist technoscience analyses owe less to construction than a
turn to performance.
Law and Singleton (2000), `This is
Not an Object'
Explores an object (alcoholic liver disease) which turns out to be enacted
in different locations in different ways overlapping and partially connected
performances. It is argued that this means that it is not an object
Mol (1999), `Ontological Politics: a Word
and Some Questions'
How are worlds, realities, performed into being? This is an ANT question.
Here an 'ontological politics' is imagined.
Mol (2001), `The Body Multiple: Artherosclerosis
in Practice'
'After actor-network', rather than ANT. On the multiplicity of objects, the
distribution of difference performances over different sites, the forms of co-ordination
between them and their different dependencies.
Singleton (2000), `Made on Location:
public health and subjectivities'
Explores the partially connected performances which both alter and at the
same time reaffirm public health advice for the case of sudden infant death
syndrome.
Castells (1996), `The Rise of the Network Society'
Included not because it refers to actor-network theory, but as an example
of the popularisation of the notion of 'network' as applied in the context of
globalisation. The differences between this style of theorising and that of
ANT (and after) are noteworthy.
Haraway (1997), `Modest_Witness@Second_Millenium.Female_Man©_Meets_Oncomouse:
Feminism and Technoscience,'
Included not because it belongs to actor network theory, but because it is
the best-known example of the different and partially related radical feminist
technoscience alternative to actor-network theory. The 'after-ANT' studies in
this resource in many cases owe as much or more to Haraway as to ANT itself.
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