Chemists without Borders

Dublin Core

Title

Chemists without Borders

Creator

Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent

Date

September 1, 2018

Type

Journal Article

Zotero

Author

Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent

Item Type

Journal Article

DOI

10.1086/699999

ISSN

0021-1753

Abstract Note

While chemists today work in a variety of professional domains—ranging from medicine and pharmaceutical companies to nuclear technology, biotechnology, and nanotechnology—students are taught chemistry as if it were a unified discipline with a specific territory and a common language shared by all chemists. The chemists’ imaginary is shaped around the image of a diaspora: a scattered population of former inhabitants of a homeland immersed in foreign countries and yet retaining their cultural identity. This essay suggests an alternative perspective on the basis of four different case studies of engagement of chemists beyond the traditional turf of chemistry: nuclear technology, materials science and engineering, synthetic biology, and nanotechnology. Instead of assuming that there is a predetermined territory of chemistry, it argues that the epistemic profile of chemistry is shaped by the various “terrains” (or fields) where chemists are working. The image of a family tree deeply rooted in soil should be replaced by that of a large and loose rhizome network.

Access Date

2018-09-27 08:24:19

Date

September 1, 2018

Issue

3

Journal Abbreviation

Isis

Library Catalog

journals.uchicago.edu (Atypon)

Pages

597-607

Publication Title

Isis

Title

Chemists without Borders

URL

https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/699999

Volume

109