Article ID: CBB000932753

Material Rhetoric: Spreading Stones and Showing Bones in the Study of Prehistory (2009)

unapi

Since the linguistic turn, the role of rhetoric in the circulation and the popular representation of knowledge has been widely accepted in science studies. This article aims to analyze not a textual form of scientific rhetoric, but the crucial role of materiality in scientific debates. It introduces the concept of material rhetoric to understand the promotional regimes in which material objects play an essential argumentative role. It analyzes the phenomenon by looking at two students of prehistory from nineteenth-century Belgium. In the study of human prehistory and evolution, material data are either fairly abundant stone tools or very scarce fossil bones. These two types of material data stand for two different strategies in material rhetoric. In this article, the first strategy is exemplified by Aimé Rutot, who gathered great masses of eoliths (crudely chipped stones which he believed to be prehistoric tools). The second strategy is typified by the example of Julien Fraipont, who based his scientific career on only two Neanderthal skeletons. Rutot sent his artifacts to a very wide audience, while Fraipont showed his skeletons to only a few selected scholars. Unlike Rutot, however, Fraipont was able to monitor his audience's interpretation of the finds by means of personal contacts. What an archaeologist gains in reach, he or she apparently loses in control. In this article we argue that only those scholars who find the right balance between the extremes of reach and control will prove to be successful.

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Description On the attempt to understand human prehistory and evolution through investigation of stone tools or bones. Case studies of Julien Fraipont and Aimé Rutot.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB000932753/

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Authors & Contributors
Catalá-Gorgues, Jesús I.
Amy Way
Madison, Paige
White, Mark J.
Walker, Alan
Tobias, Phillip V.
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Science in Context
Journal of the History of Biology
Concepts
Human evolution
Physical anthropology
Human paleontology
Paleoanthropology
Prehistory and primitive societies
Fossils
People
Lyell, Charles
Darwin, Charles Robert
Boule, Pierre Marcellin
Ameghino, Florentino
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century
Stone age
Ancient
18th century
Places
Spain
Germany
East Asia
Argentina
Scandinavia; Nordic countries
France
Institutions
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
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