•  271
    Roadkill: Between Humans, Nonhuman Animals, and Technologies
    Society and Animals 12 (4): 277-298. 2004.
    This paper has two broad objectives. First, the paper aims to treat roadkill as a topic of serious social scientific inquiry by addressing it as a cultural artifact through which various identities are played out. Thus, the paper shows how the idea of roadkill-as-food mediates contradictions and ironies in American identities concerned with hunting, technology, and relationships to nature. At a second, more abstract, level, the paper deploys the example of roadkill to suggest a par ticular appro…Read more
  •  11
    Comprehension, Apprehension, Prehension: Heterogeneity and the Public Understanding of Science
    Science, Technology, and Human Values 27 (3): 357-378. 2002.
    This article examines the main approaches to public understanding of science in light of recent developments in social and cultural theory. While traditional and critical perspectives on PUS differ in terms of their models of the public, science, and understanding, they nevertheless share a number of commonalities, which are humanism, incorporeality, and discrete sites. These are contrasted, respectively, to versions of the person as hybridic, to treatments of embodiment drawing especially on Wh…Read more
  •  18
    Seeing and Believing
    Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 33 37-43. 2008.