Smith, Pamela H. (Editor)
Meyers, Amy (Editor)
Cook, Harold John (Editor)
“Making” and “knowing” have generally been viewed as belonging to different types and orders of knowledge. “Craft” and “making” have been associated with how-to information, oriented to a particular situation or product, often informal and tacit, while “knowing” has been related to theoretical, propositional, and abstract knowledge including natural science. Although craftspeople and artists have worked with natural materials and sometimes have been viewed as experts in the behavior of matter, the notion that making art can constitute a means of knowing nature is a novel one. This volume, with contributions from historians of science, medicine, art, and material culture, shows that the histories of science and art are not simply histories of concepts or styles, or at least not that alone, but histories of the making and using of objects to understand the world. The common view of craftspeople more or less mindlessly following a collection of recipes or rules—which are said to be fundamentally different from “science” and “art”—has greatly distorted our understanding of the growth of natural knowledge in the early modern period. More intensive examination of material practices makes it clear that the methods of the artisan represent a process of knowledge-making that involved extensive experimentation and observation, in addition to generalizations about matter and nature. As increasing numbers of people came to be immersed in such activities, whether as craftspeople, medical practitioners, merchants, nobles, magistrates, reformers, collectors, or even scholars, the attributes of “nature” were not only articulated in a variety of ways, and not only seen as a resource for human use, but came to be identified with a variety of “goods.” Knowing nature could of course lead to material betterment but for many, living according to nature’s dictates also led to the development of personal ethics and the public good. As natural knowledge became increasingly important in society in these various ways, it forged new connections among groups, helped create new identities, brought about new kinds of claims to authority and intellectual legitimacy, and gave rise to new ways of thinking about the senses, certainty, and epistemology. None of this could have happened without the conversations and controversies that enabled the assessment of objects in novel ways.
...MoreReview Hjalmar Fors (2015) Review of "Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge". Ambix: Journal of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry (pp. 395-396).
Review Vermij, Rienk H. (2015) Review of "Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge". Technology and Culture (pp. 977-978).
Chapter Elizabeth Yale (2014) Making Lists: Social and Material Technologies in the Making of Seventeenth-century British Natural History. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 280-301).
Chapter Horst Bredekamp (2014) Corals versus Trees. Charles Darwin's Early Sketches of Evolution. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 357-376).
Chapter Sachiko Kusukawa (2014) Conrad Gessner on an ‘ad vivum’ Image. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 330-356).
Chapter Joel Fry (2014) Inside the Box: John Bartram and the Science and Commerce of the Transatlantic Plant Trade. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 194-220).
Chapter Pamela H. Smith (2014) Making as Knowing: Craft as Natural Philosophy. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 17-47).
Chapter Lisa Ford (2014) From Plant to Page: Aesthetics and Objectivity in a Nineteenth-century Book of Trees. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 221-242).
Chapter Brooks, Mary M. (2014) Decaying objects and the making of meaning in Museums. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 377-404).
Chapter Malcom Baker (2014) Epilogue. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 405-414).
Chapter Susan B. Butters (2014) From Skills to Wisdom: Making, Knowing and the Arts. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 48-85).
Chapter Harold J. Cook (2014) The Preservation of Specimens and the Take-Off in Anatomical Knowledge in the Early Modern Period. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 302-329).
Chapter Alicia Wiessberg-Roberts (2014) Between Trade and Science: Dyeing and Knowing in the Long Eighteenth-Century. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 86-112).
Chapter Alisha Rankin (2014) How to Cure the Golden Vein: Medical Remedies as Wissenschaft in Renaissance Germany. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 113-137).
Chapter Mark Laird; Karen Bridgman (2014) American Roots: Technologies of Plant Transportation and Cultivation in the Early Atlantic World. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 164-193).
Chapter Glenn Adamson (2014) The Labor of Division: Cabinetmaking and the Production of Knowledge. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 243-279).
Chapter Patrick Wallis; Catherine Wright (2014) Evidence, Artisan Experience and Authority in Early Modern England. In: Ways of Making and Knowing: The Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge (pp. 138-163).
Book
Turkle, Sherry;
(2007)
Evocative Objects: Things We Think With
(/isis/citation/CBB001023048/)
Article
Wendel, Paul J.;
(2011)
Object-Based Epistemology at a Creationist Museum
(/isis/citation/CBB001032764/)
Article
Viktoria Tkaczyk;
Christine von Oertzen;
(2023)
Introduction: Reconsidering the Resources of Epistemic Tools
(/isis/citation/CBB421843702/)
Article
Bertram Mapunda;
(2023)
Debate: Why Study Precolonial African Technology and Material Culture?
(/isis/citation/CBB676142175/)
Article
Record, Isaac;
(2010)
Scientific Instruments: Knowledge, Practice, and Culture
(/isis/citation/CBB001023785/)
Article
Wise, M. Norton;
(1999)
Materialized Epistemology
(/isis/citation/CBB000110101/)
Book
Mitcham, Carl;
(2000)
Metaphysics, Epistemology, and Technology
(/isis/citation/CBB000100785/)
Book
Howlett, Peter;
Morgan, Mary S.;
(2011)
How Well Do Facts Travel? The Dissemination of Reliable Knowledge
(/isis/citation/CBB001023104/)
Article
Mirjam Brusius;
(2017)
The Field in the Museum: Puzzling Out Babylon in Berlin
(/isis/citation/CBB513564358/)
Article
Bruce T. Moran;
(2021)
Court Authority and the University: Networks, Recipes, and Things-in-the-Making vs. the Abstractions of Made Things
(/isis/citation/CBB242194040/)
Article
Jonas van der Straeten;
Julia Obertreis;
(2022)
Technology, Temporality and the Study of Central Asia
(/isis/citation/CBB176455660/)
Article
Anirudha Dhanawade;
(2020)
Crystals, Crystallization, and Crystallography in Hegel, Stendhal, and Ruskin
(/isis/citation/CBB600283159/)
Article
Huntington, Tom;
(Summer 2010)
Tinkering with History: Vintage Motorcycles
(/isis/citation/CBB808723036/)
Chapter
Smith, Pamela H.;
(2001)
Giving voice to the hands; The articulation of material literacy in the sixteenth century
(/isis/citation/CBB001181473/)
Book
Yunchiahn C. Sena;
(2019)
Bronze and Stone: The Cult of Antiquity in Song Dynasty China
(/isis/citation/CBB871590852/)
Book
François Sigaut;
(2013)
Comment Homo devint Faber
(/isis/citation/CBB878630900/)
Chapter
Oldenziel, Ruth;
(1994)
Gender en materie in de tijd van poststructurele theorieën
(/isis/citation/CBB001181707/)
Article
Pedro de Lima Navarro;
Cristina de Amorim Machado;
(2020)
An Origin of Citations: Darwin’s Collaborators and Their Contributions to the Origin of Species
(/isis/citation/CBB282530476/)
Article
Bronwen Douglas;
Chris Ballard;
(2022)
Contact Tracing: The Materiality of Encounters
(/isis/citation/CBB538904525/)
Book
Blaszczyk, Regina Lee;
(2009)
American Consumer Society, 1865--2005: From Hearth to HDTV
(/isis/citation/CBB001201132/)
Be the first to comment!