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Slippery: Field notes in empirical ontology

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors explore empirical ontology by arguing that realities are enacted in practices and use the case of Atlantic salmon to argue that different salmon are being enacted within those different practices.
Abstract
This paper explores empirical ontology by arguing that realities are enacted in practices. Using the case of Atlantic salmon, it describes a series of scientific and fish-farming practices. Since these practices differ, the paper also argues that different salmon are being enacted within those different practices. The paper explores the precarious choreographies of those practices, considers the ways in which they enact agency and also work to generate Otherness. Finally it emphasises the productivity of practices and notes that they generate not simply particular realities (for instance particular salmon), but also enact a penumbra of not quite realised realities: animals that were almost but not quite created.

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Dissertation

How to make sense: Sensory modification in grinder subculture

Mark Doerksen
TL;DR: In this article, the role of senses in understanding and responding to social problems was examined in the Canadian and American grinder scene to understand the relationship between bodies, technology, and culture.
Journal ArticleDOI

From world cities to world sites: Strategic ruralism and the case for an anthropology of actually existing connectivity:

TL;DR: In this paper, anthropological interest in trans-local connection has expanded in recent decades, anthropologists have increasingly turned to cities as paradigmatic locations of the global, the modern, and the...
Dissertation

Eating a nuclear disaster: A vital institutional ethnography of everyday eating in the aftermath of Tokyo Electric Power Company’s Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant disaster

Karly Burch
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey on language and transliteration in English-to-Arabic transliterated corpora, including a table of contents and a list of figures and abbreviations.
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Biopolitical bordering: Enacting populations as intelligible objects of government:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that these discussio... argue that the discussion of how to interpret and use biopolitics has been fiercely debated, usually in highly generalized terms.
References
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Book

Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature

Donna Haraway
TL;DR: Simians, Cyborgs and Women as mentioned in this paper is a collection of ten essays written between 1978 and 1989 by Haraway that analyzes accounts, narratives, and stories of the creation of nature, living organisms, and cyborgs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some elements of a sociology of translation: domestication of the scallops and the fishermen of St Brieuc Bay

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a scientific and economic controversy about the causes for the decline in the population of scallops in St. Brieuc Bay and the attempts by three marine biologists to develop a conservation strategy for that population.
Book

Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts

TL;DR: The authors presents laboratory science in a deliberately skeptical way: as an anthropological approach to the culture of the scientist, drawing on recent work in literary criticism, the authors study how the social world of the laboratory produces papers and other "texts,"' and how the scientific vision of reality becomes that set of statements considered, for the time being, too expensive to change.
Book

The Elementary Forms of Religious Life

TL;DR: In this article, Fields has given us a splendid new translation of the greatest work of sociology ever written, one we will not be embarrassed to assign to our students, in addition she has written a brilliant and profound introduction.

Some elements of a sociology of translation: domestication of the scallops and the fishermen of St Brieuc Bay

Michel Callon
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a scientific and economic controversy about the causes for the decline in the population of scallops in St. Brieuc Bay and the attempts by three marine biologists to develop a conservation strategy for that population.