Pub Date : 2023-01-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2022.2162365
Larry Au
The imaginary of an ascendant Asia as a scientific and technological powerhouse has loomed large in public and policy debates in the United States and Europe in recent years. Increasingly, universities and research institutes in Asia are seen as competitors and innovators that have the potential to disrupt established hierarchies in the global scientific field. In Anju Mary Paul’s Asian Scientists on the Move: Changing Science in a Changing Asia, we see the transnational social lives of the scientists behind these developments and come to understand the complex decisions that shape their scientific careers and migratory decisions. Paul shows the linkages between national systems and cultures of science and the global scientific field, and identifies the agency of individual actors in raising the national profiles of their “home” and “host” countries in global science. Paul brings her much-needed expertise in international migration and her skill as a rigorous empirical social scientist to the study of Asian scientists. At the core of Paul’s data are interviews with 119 life sciences academic scientists who received their PhDs or postdoctoral training at elite universities overseas (e.g. Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and were employed at elite universities in their home or host country (e.g. Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanyang Technological University, Academia Sinica, Indian Institute of Science). While some scientists “returned” to their country of birth, others in Paul’s interview sample were “halfway-returnees” who turned to places like Singapore and Taiwan, which allowed them to be closer to family but enabled them to maintain the scientific networks cultivated while they were overseas. The book is divided into three sections. In Part I, Paul provides an overview of the recent history of science policy in the four cases she examines: Mainland China,
近年来,在美国和欧洲的公共和政策辩论中,关于亚洲将崛起为科技强国的幻想显得十分突出。亚洲的大学和研究机构越来越被视为竞争者和创新者,它们有可能打破全球科学领域的既定等级制度。在Anju Mary Paul的《亚洲科学家的迁移:在变化的亚洲中改变科学》一书中,我们看到了这些发展背后科学家的跨国社会生活,并开始理解塑造他们的科学事业和迁移决定的复杂决策。Paul展示了国家科学体系和文化与全球科学领域之间的联系,并确定了个体行动者在提高其“母国”和“东道国”在全球科学中的国家形象方面的作用。保罗将她在国际移民方面急需的专业知识和她作为严谨的实证社会科学家的技能带到亚洲科学家的研究中。Paul数据的核心是对119名生命科学学术科学家的采访,他们在海外精英大学(如哈佛大学、斯坦福大学、哥伦比亚大学、麻省理工学院)接受博士或博士后培训,并在本国或东道国的精英大学(如中国科学院、南洋理工大学、中央研究院、印度科学院)工作。虽然一些科学家“回到”了他们的出生国,但在Paul的采访样本中,其他人是“中途归国”,他们转向新加坡和台湾等地,这使他们与家人更接近,但使他们能够保持在海外建立的科学网络。这本书分为三个部分。在第一部分中,保罗通过她研究的四个案例概述了科学政策的近代史:中国大陆,
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Pub Date : 2023-01-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2022.2162364
Jelena Große-Bley
What does a bowl of noodles in a Shanghai eatery have to do with a paddy rice field in Anhui Province? In Rural–Urban Migration and Agro-Technical Change in PostReform China, published with Amsterdam University Press as part of its New Mobilities in Asia series, Lena Kaufmann traces migrant stories from urban centers back to the countryside of the People’s Republic of China (PRC). At the center of this thoughtful book are farming households, their rural–urban migrant members, and the socio-technical relations to their paddy rice fields. Her work sheds new light on social and technological change in China’s countryside by analyzing land-use strategies and migration together, while taking seriously both social and material dimensions to the decision-making of her interlocutors. Kaufmann offers a refreshing perspective in five chapters on rural–urban migration in China by focusing on how intimately it is shaped by socio-technical logics of farming in their places of origin. She invites readers to think about “community of practice worlds” to understand her interlocutors, who are rural–urban migrants and their families in rice farming villages in Hunan und Anhui Province. Navigating the complex and dynamic developments at China’s rural–urban migration nexus, they are faced with many questions. Yet, Kaufmann’s interlocutors rarely mentioned their rice paddy fields, which they have to maintain. “You don’t talk about your bathroom either. There is no need to talk about it” (16), they explained. But Kaufmann explores how it is exactly this often unspoken “paddy field-migration predicament” of having to tend to paddy rice fields at home, while working far away in urban centers such as Shanghai, that shapes migration and land-use strategies of rural households. With a keen eye for detail and lucid writing style that convincingly draws out broader connections underlying migration patterns and land-use practices in China, Kaufmann shows how the migration situation is reflected in the landscape of today’s rural China, which entails things that stay, such as paddy fields, and things
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Pub Date : 2023-01-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2022.2162363
E. Sternfeld
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Pub Date : 2023-01-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2023.2167655
Wen-ling Tu
{"title":"Welcome to Our Newly Renovated Open Kitchen!","authors":"Wen-ling Tu","doi":"10.1080/18752160.2023.2167655","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/18752160.2023.2167655","url":null,"abstract":"","PeriodicalId":45255,"journal":{"name":"East Asian Science Technology and Society-An International Journal","volume":"30 1","pages":"3 - 5"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8,"publicationDate":"2023-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"78240513","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-01-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2023.2167837
Yuen Chee Wai, En Chao
Singapore-based experimental band The Observatory (天文台樂團) recently showcased their bio-sonification exhibition at Singapore Art Museum: REFUSE (14 January–17 April 2022). Set against imagery of manicured gardens in a celebration of organic growth and decomposition, REFUSE is a critical pun. First, REFUSE means to reject the current anthropocentric worldview in a time of ecological crises, and secondly it embraces inter-media arts that fuse recycled instruments with bio-sounds. Instruments were either the platform to grow mushrooms onto, or even themselves fully bio-fabricated by mushrooms – including a fully playable lap steel mycelium guitar that is simultaneously played by a mushroom. To amaze the audience further, these instruments were all wired to vibrate, their rhythms controlled by a growing mycelium whose organic growth is visually mapped and translated into signals that trigger the vibration. As the humidity and density of the mushroom jar changes, the sounds also vary, each sound unique even during the same day. As Obervatory band-member Yuen Chee Wai (袁志偉) told En-Chieh Chiao of our cover-image curating team when describing the mycelium's sounds, “They play like a decomposing composition.” The cover team chose this exhibition because it speaks to a research note and to an article in this issue that respectively address the issue of noise control and aging in Singapore. While the city–state endeavors to contain both noise and health in old age as parts of governance, here the artists renounce control over sound and let biological non-human actors set the course of subtle sensory experiences.
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Pub Date : 2022-10-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2022.2136457
Jia-shin Chen
SA
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Pub Date : 2022-10-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2022.2148050
J. Owen
The award-winning book from Professor David Fedman, a historian at the University of California Irvine, is a thoroughly researched journey through the fascinat-ing history of a perhaps less familiar aspect of colonial Korea. The book begins with a foreword by Paul S. Sutter (University of Colorado Boulder) that informs readers of the many complexities of the historical developments related to forest management, policy, research, and economics during Korea ’ s colonial period. The Japanese occupiers were not merely concerned with enlarging business opportunities and pro fi t from the extensive forests on the Korean peninsula
加州大学欧文分校(University of California Irvine)的历史学家戴维·费德曼(David Fedman)教授的获奖作品,对朝鲜殖民时期一个可能不太为人所知的方面进行了深入的研究,讲述了一段迷人的历史。这本书以保罗·萨特(美国科罗拉多大学博尔德分校)的前言开始,向读者介绍了韩国殖民时期森林经营、政策、研究、经济等历史发展的复杂性。日本占领者关心的不仅仅是扩大朝鲜半岛广阔森林的商业机会和利润
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Pub Date : 2022-10-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2022.2136831
Leandro Rodriguez Medina, Hyungsub Choi
These short essays are an experiment in quite how far EASTS ’ cover images can take us. Af fi liating STS with different disciplines, and working on opposite sides of the globe, we are delighted to have two EASTS editors — Hyungsub Choi, an excellent historian of technology working in Korea, and Leandro Rodriguez Medina, the former editor-in- chief of Mexico-based Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society — re fl ecting on their encounters with three EASTS covers that feature trains — an iconic presence of progress and modernity in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Without knowing that Shigehisa Kuriyama ’ s beautifully written “ Covers and the Poetics of Communication ” featured two of the three mentioned in his essay, Leandro chooses covers that resonate with his experiences in a railway-employee family in Argentina and tries to make sense of the cultural messages they carry for non-Europeans. Sharing Leandro ’ s critical examination of these modern/Western machines, Hyungsub ’ s re fl ection is a culturally-oriented one: “ What do we mean by ‘ East Asian technology ’ ? ” As his essay goes, Hyungsub ’ s observation nicely echoes the promises of “ Making Modernity in East Asia: Technologies of Everyday Life, 19th – 21st Centuries ” project, a Hong Kong based, transnational collaboration that aims to trace technological processes and modernity in this region, advancing “ new methodological strategies into the study of technology and its knowledge, practice, and artifacts that de fi ne and rede fi ne East Asia as a region with fl uid boundaries ” (Hirsh, Leung and Nakayama 2019: 507). As readers will see, the two essays here do not stand alone; instead, via the poetics of EASTS covers on how technology has made STS both modern and traditional, global and vernacular, ideological and practi- cal, together they achieve a recondita armonia.
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Pub Date : 2022-10-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2022.2154063
T. Rook, Harry Yi-Jui Wu
{"title":"Defending Lives among Concrete Walls: An Interview with Flâneur Artist, Tom Rook","authors":"T. Rook, Harry Yi-Jui Wu","doi":"10.1080/18752160.2022.2154063","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/18752160.2022.2154063","url":null,"abstract":"","PeriodicalId":45255,"journal":{"name":"East Asian Science Technology and Society-An International Journal","volume":"37 1","pages":"550 - 553"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8,"publicationDate":"2022-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"74760205","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2022-10-02DOI: 10.1080/18752160.2022.2148049
Hiroto Shimizu
Humans
人类
{"title":"Humans and Devices in Medical Contexts: Case Studies from Japan","authors":"Hiroto Shimizu","doi":"10.1080/18752160.2022.2148049","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/18752160.2022.2148049","url":null,"abstract":"Humans","PeriodicalId":45255,"journal":{"name":"East Asian Science Technology and Society-An International Journal","volume":"35 1","pages":"564 - 567"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8,"publicationDate":"2022-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"74698738","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}