Representing Human Nature and the Brain
Due: Class #6
You may either critically analyze a news item or scientific article. The purpose of this assignment is to practice critically discussing the way in which assumptions are embedded in presentations of facts. There is no right answer to the assignment, but there are better and worse ways of analyzing.
You are to search for an article that discusses the brain and some aspect of personhood (a disease, mental illness, intelligence, emotions, violence, etc.). Your task is to discuss the assumptions made regarding human nature in the text, and to respond to these assumptions: are they necessary? If so, why? If not, what else could have been looked at and discussed?
Discuss the point of view of the article. Who is it written by? Who for? Who benefits by these assumptions?
If the article is not enough in itself or if you would like more information to contrast it with, feel free to draw upon any of the readings we have done, other articles you find, and/or books. You may compare and analyze up to three sources.
The point is to get as specific as possible about how the assumptions are used, the advantages and limitations of them, and your own evaluations of this.
Length: Limit is 1200 words (approx 5 pages). You are not to quote more than a phrase or short sentence at a time and no summaries.
Grading
Due: Class #12
Pick a subfield or specific brain-related research topic in neuroscience or neurology or psychiatry. Write an account of it as a field using the artifact model. The paper should address all of the following areas:
Note 1: In answering questions about how something has changed over the years, you need to pay critical attention to how 'periods of time' are created. Do different people tell different stories about the evolution of a field or its practices? What might account for that?
Note 2: This project will require research including defining your field (and probably refining and redefining it a couple of times if it is too big or too small). Then you will need to search databases, online, and journals to produce a map. Please document all of your sources (your bibliography will also serve as a map online and off to further information about the field). You will also have to talk with a few people in the field. You do not need to formally interview them, but rather have them help you understand the field and its dynamics. You may also want to spend some time in a lab observing the sorts of behavior that takes place there and talking with undergrads, grads and techs in addition to senior and junior researchers.
Length: 3000-3500 words or more, proofread, plus bibliography and footnotes.
Drugs and Culture: Popularizing Brains
Due: Class #15
Here is the third and final project for the class. It is basically the same as the first assignment but you must find a scientific article and a popular account of it. You cannot do the same article from your first assignment. Again, it is easier to take a popular account and search for the scientific article(s).
Also, you must use some concepts from class and cite them (the authors of the books or articles that we discussed). Failure to do so will result in a C.
As discussed, you may substitute either a paper related directly to your mapping project, or a multimedia presentation that works with images, but you must clear these two alternatives with me beforehand.
Your task is to trace a scientific article concerning the brain into popular culture. Ideally this will be related to your field mapping project. This may be done by finding an article in a newspaper or magazine and working backward to the scientific article upon which it was based. You may look at a set of popular articles based on one article, or you may choose a magazine article (such as the Newsweek one on violent boys, and look at a small set of scientific articles). The purpose of this assignment is to critically analyze the translation of facts across genres (in this case between articles written by scientists for scientists and those written by science journalists for popular consumption).
Examine how the experimental text was transformed into news. How is the meaning of the experiment changed in the translation to a popular media? What limitations of the experimental setup and qualifications on the results are deleted? What assumptions are added? How are the different forms of uncertainty (S. L. Star) dealt with? What assumptions remain through the research and the popularization?
In particular, pay attention to assumptions made regarding human nature in the text (Foucault, Hacking): how might these be shaped by the different audiences? And respond to these assumptions: are they necessary? If so, why? If not, what else could have been looked at and discussed?
For each text, make sure that you cover: Who is it written by? Who for? Who benefits by these assumptions? Where is the information? Who has access to it? How easy is the access (who doesn't have access to it)?
Discuss the point of view of the article. Who is it written by? Who for? Who benefits by these assumptions?
If the article is not enough in itself or if you would like more information to contrast it with, feel free to draw upon any of the readings we have done, other articles you find, and/or books. You may compare and analyze up to three sources.
The point is to get as specific as possible about how the assumptions are used, the advantages and limitations of them, and your own evaluations of this.
Length: Limit is 1600 words (approx. 5-6 pages). You are not to quote more than a phrase or short sentence at a time and no summaries.
Grading