Gender and Science
[LR1]Spring 2002
T Th 2:20-3:50, PK 101
Karen
Johnson; office: Bewkes 219; telephone: 229-5495
Laura
Rediehs; office: Piskor 110; telephone: 229-5457
This
course is an upper-level seminar-style course on the relationships between
gender issues and science. Many kinds of questions can be asked about gender
and science: questions regarding the social context of science with respect to
gender issues; questions regarding the historical development of science and
how the changing roles of women in society have affected science; and questions
regarding the epistemological and ethical implications of these changing
relationships. Two of the most
important ongoing issues raised by the study of gender and science are: (1) If there has been gender bias in
scientific practice, has this affected the content of scientific knowledge, and
if so, in what ways? (2) If there has
been gender bias in the practice of science, are there important ethical
problems resulting from this bias? By
exploring these questions and issues, we will be able to consider how science
might better be a method of understanding in a democratic society.
The
materials listed below are available from the Bookstore.
s
Harding,
Sandra, The Science Question in Feminism,
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1986).
s
Keller,
Evelyn Fox, A Feeling for the Organism,
(New York: W. H. Freeman and Company, 1983).
s
Kosso,
Peter, Reading the Book of Nature, (Cambridge
University Press, 1992).
There
are other required readings for the course as well, which are listed below the
assignment schedule. Instructions for
how to obtain these materials will be given out in class. The writing assignments include two short
papers, a project consisting of an oral presentation and a written report, and
a final integrative paper. Details about each of these assignments will be made
available separately.
This
course makes use of the class web-based system called “Blackboard.” This system is useful in making class
materials available electronically, for posting announcements, and for
facilitating online discussions. The
web address for access into the Blackboard system is: http://bb.stlawu.edu.
Important
Changes from Past Semesters: Every student now has an
account within the new and improved Blackboard system. This account is connected to your St.
Lawrence University student e-mail address.
Therefore, it is very important that you check your official St.
Lawrence e-mail account regularly, as we may be using these e-mail addresses if
we need to send information to you by e-mail between classes. If you have other e-mail addresses and
dislike having to check them all, then be sure to forward messages delivered to
your St. Lawrence account to your preferred e-mail address. You are responsible for information sent
to you through your St. Lawrence University e-mail account.
If
you are unfamiliar with the Blackboard system and/or you need help getting
started with this new version of Blackboard, please seek assistance early on in
the course.
Assignment
Schedule
|
Date |
What To Read, What Will
Happen, or What Is Due |
|
T
Jan 22 |
s
Introduction to the Course |
|
Th
Jan 24 |
s
Martin, Emily, “The Egg and the Sperm: How Science Has Constructed a
Romance Based on Stereotypical Male-Female Roles.” s
Steppan, Nancy Leys, “Race and Gender: The Role of Analogy in
Science.” s
Fausto-Sterling, Anne, “The Five Sexes: Why Male And Female Are Not
Enough.” |
|
T
Jan 29 |
s
Kosso, Peter, Reading the Book of Nature, pp. 1-104. |
|
Th
Jan 31 |
s
Remainder of Kosso. |
|
T
Feb 5 |
s
Reports on samples of scientific method from science textbooks s
Paper due |
|
Th
Feb 7 |
s
Reports, continued. |
|
T
Feb 12 |
s
Start reading: Keller, Evelyn
Fox, A Feeling for the Organism. s
Class: background on genetics
during the time described in Keller’s book. |
|
Th
Feb 14 |
s
Finish Keller’s book. s
Class: discussion on Keller’s
book. |
|
T
Feb 19 |
s
Rossiter, article in Isis on home economics |
|
Th
Feb 21 |
s
Consultations about projects |
|
T
Feb 26 |
s
Project reports |
|
Th
Feb 28 |
s
Project reports |
|
T
Mar 5 |
s
Project reports |
|
Th
Mar 7 |
s
Project reports |
|
T
Mar 12 |
s
Project reports |
|
Th
Mar 14 |
s
Project reports |
|
Spring
Break |
|
|
T
Mar 26 |
s
Lecture on Feminist Theory |
|
Th
Mar 28 |
s
Harding, Sandra, from The Science Question in Feminism, Chs.
1-3 |
|
T
Apr 2 |
s
Harding, Chs. 4-6 |
|
Th
Apr 4 |
s
Harding, Chs. 7-10 |
|
T
Apr 9 |
s
Giere, “The Feminist Question in Science” |
|
Th
Apr 11 |
s
Keller, Evelyn Fox, “Feminism and Science” |
|
T
Apr 16 |
s
Class: Physics experiment |
|
Th
Apr 18 |
s
Peter Kosso, “Quantum Mechanics and Realism” s
Karen Barad, “Agential Realism” |
|
T
Apr 23 |
s
Lorraine Daston, “Objectivity and the Escape from Perspective” s
Daston and Galison, “The Image of Objectivity” |
|
Th
Apr 25 |
s
Helen Longino, “Values and Objectivity” |
|
T
Apr 30 |
s
Paper due (5-page
paper comparing the views on objectivity described or implied by Kosso,
Barad, Daston, and Longino). s
Laura Rediehs, “Implications of Relational Realism” s
Karen Johnson, “Science at the Breakfast Table” |
|
Th
May 2 |
s
Science and Democracy |
|
Final Exam Week |
s
Final Paper Due |
Bibliography of Readings
Listed Above:
·
Barad,
Karen, “Agential Realism: Feminist Interventions in Understanding Scientific
Practices,” from The Science Studies Reader, ed. Mario Biagioli (New
York: Routledge, 1999).
·
Daston,
Lorraine, “Objectivity and the Escape from Perspective,” Social Studies of
Science, 22 (1992).
·
Daston,
Lorraine and Peter Galison, “The Image of Objectivity,” Representations,
40 (1992).
·
Fausto-Sterling,
Anne, “The Five Sexes: Why Male and Female Are Not Enough,” The Sciences, v. 33 (Mar./Apr. 1993), p.
20-25.
·
Giere,
Ronald, “The Feminist Question in Science,” Science
Without Laws, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999).
·
Harding,
Sandra, The Science Question in Feminism,
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1986).
·
Johnson,
Karen, “Science at the Breakfast Table,” Physics in Perspective, 1
(1999), 22-34.
·
Keller,
Evelyn Fox, “Feminism and Science,” Signs:
Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 7:3, 1982.
·
Keller,
Evelyn Fox, A Feeling for the Organism,
(New York: W. H. Freeman and Company, 1983).
·
Kosso,
Peter, “Quantum Mechanics and Realism” (unpublished manuscript).
·
Kosso,
Peter, Reading the Book of Nature, (Cambridge
University Press, 1992).
·
Longino,
Helen, “Values and Objectivity,” from Science as Social Knowledge (Princeton
University Press, 1990).
·
Martin,
Emily, “The Egg and the Sperm: How Science Has Constructed a Romance Based on
Stereotypical Male-Female Roles,” Signs:
Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 16:3, 1991.
·
Rediehs,
Laura, “Implications of Relational Realism” (unpublished manuscript, 2000).
·
Rossiter,
Margaret W., "Women's work" in science, 1880-1910, In: Isis: International Review devoted to the
History of Science and its Cultural Influences 1980, 71: 381-398.
·
Stepan,
Nancy Leys, “Race and Gender: The Role of Analogy in Science,” ISIS, 77 (1986), 261-77.
Here are the relative
weights for the different assignments for the course:
|
Assignment |
Weight |
|
First report and paper (due 2/5) |
15% |
|
Project report |
25% |
|
Paper on scientific knowledge (due 4/30) |
15% |
|
Final paper |
30% |
|
Participation |
15% |
We
will give you feedback on all of these, but the grading for the course will be
through self-assessment. Please see the
Self-Assessment Handbook for details.
We
reserve the right to make copies of any of your assignments to use as samples
of the work that our students do in our classes. In cases in which we choose to share these samples with others,
we will always use these samples anonymously, except in cases in which we want
to cite your brilliant ideas in our own academic writing, in which case we will
cite you properly and send you a copy when it gets published. If you would prefer our not keeping copies
of your work for any reason without permission, or if you would prefer to be
informed when we do so, you must write, sign, and date a statement to that
effect, detailing the restrictions you wish would be applied, and giving two
copies of this statement to one of us, which we will then sign to acknowledge
receipt, returning one copy to you.
Your not following these steps is implied consent to let us use your
work for the educational and academic purposes outlined above. We hope that all of you will indeed so
consent, as you can trust us to use your work respectfully and to preserve
anonymity when we use your work for educational purposes, and to cite your work
when proper acknowledgment is required and when doing so is complimentary to
you.
Also,
we reserve the right to dispose of your final papers for this course after the
seventh week of the following semester if you have not picked them up by
then. If you will want your final paper
back, please make arrangements before the end of this present semester (the
semester you are taking the course).
Please
remember that the written work that you submit must be your own work. Do not have anyone else write your papers
for you, and do not represent anyone else's ideas or writing as your own. When referring to someone else's ideas, do
so with proper acknowledgment (as detailed in a separate handout). Important
note: At St. Lawrence, professors are required to report cases of
suspected academic dishonesty to the Academic Honor Council. See your Student Handbook for details. Please do your share in helping create and
maintain an atmosphere of trust—you will benefit much more in the long run by
taking your education seriously and participating fully in this wonderful
opportunity you have!
[LR1]Don’t forget to change headers.