Article ID: CBB848138248

Field station as stage: Re-enacting scientific work and life in Amani, Tanzania (December 2016)

unapi

Geissler, P. Wenzel (Author)
Ann H. Kelly (Author)


Social Studies of Science
Volume: 46
Issue: 6
Pages: 912-937


Publication Date: December 2016
Edition Details: Guest edited issue on the Field Station, edited by P. Wenzel Geissler, Ann H. Kelly, and Sergio Sismondo
Language: English

Located high in Tanzania’s Usambara Mountains, Amani Hill Station has been a site of progressive scientific endeavours for over a century, pushing the boundaries of botanical, zoological and medical knowledge, and providing expertise for imperial expansion, colonial welfare, national progress and international development efforts. The station’s heyday was from the 1950s to the 1970s, a period of global disease eradication campaigns and the ‘Africanization’ of science. Today, Amani lies in a state of suspended motion. Officially part of a national network of medical research stations, its buildings and vegetation are only minimally maintained, and although some staff report for duty, scientific work has ceased. Neither ruin nor time capsule, Amani has become a quiet site of remains and material traces. This article examines the methodological potentials of re-enactment – on-site performances of past research practices – to engage ethnographically with the distinct temporalities and affective registers of life at the station. The heuristic power of re-enactment resides in its anachronicity, the tensions it introduces between immediacy and theatricality, authenticity and artifice, fidelity and futility. We suggest that re-enacting early post-colonial science as events unfolding in the present disrupts straightforward narratives about the promises and shortfalls of scientific progress, raising provocative questions about the sentiments and stakes of research in ‘the tropics’.

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Article P. Wenzel Geissler; Ann H. Kelly (December 2016) A home for science: The life and times of Tropical and Polar field stations. Social Studies of Science (pp. 797-808). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB848138248/

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Authors & Contributors
Brownell, Emily
Lachenal, Guillaume
Bender, Matthew V.
Bonneuil, Christophe
Geissler, P. Wenzel
Langwick, Stacey A.
Journals
Social Studies of Science
Osiris: A Research Journal Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Economic History Review
Environmental History
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Journal of Global History
Publishers
Duke University Press
University of Pittsburgh Press
Indiana University Press
Ohio University Press
University of Minnesota Press
Intellect Ltd
Concepts
Postcolonialism
Field work
Colonialism
Ethnography
Anthropology
Medicine, traditional
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
21st century
20th century, early
Places
Africa
Tanzania (Tanganyika, Zanzibar)
Senegal
Asia
Southeast Asia
France
Institutions
Lamto (Côte d'Ivoire)
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