Synopses & Reviews
"... absolutely splendid... the style is elegant, eloquent, and witty. Rose has a unique voice in the increasingly important feminist science and epistemology discussions. A superb accomplishment." --Sandra Harding
"This is a lively, contentious, important feminist book. Rose's wit and sharp eye and her commitment to thorough comparative historical analysis make for many pages of wonderful reading." --Donna Haraway
Hilary Rose locates feminist criticism of science at the heart of both the women's movement and the radical science movement. Attending to the political economy of the production of knowledge and to what does and does not count as knowledge, she explores how women and minorities are affected by these processes. She examines at length the latest, massively resourced claimant to the old and oppressive "biology is destiny" dictum--the Human Genome program.
Rose's commitment to feminist resistance against the science and technology of oppression leads her to claim feminist science fiction--with its imaginative capacity to envision different futures with different sciences and technologies--as an ally of feminist science critics.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [286]-313) and index.
About the Author
HILARY ROSE is Professor of Social Policy and Director of the West Yorkshire Centre for Research on Women at the University of Bradford.
Table of Contents
List of Plates
Prologue
1 Introduction: Is a Feminist Science Possible?
2 Thinking from Caring: Feminism's Construction of
a Responsible Rationality
3 Feminism and the Academy: Success and Incorporation
4 Listening to Each Other: Feminist Voices in the
Theory of Scientific Knowledge
5 Gender at Work in the Production System of Science
6 Joining the Procession: "Man'aging the Entry of
Women into the Royal Society
7 Nine Decades, Nine Women, Ten Nobel Prizes:
Gender Politics at the Apex of Science
8 Feminism and the Genetic Turn: Challenging
Reproductive Technoscience
9 Dreaming the Future: Other Wor(l)ds
Epilogue: Women's Work is Never Done
Notes
Bibliography
Index