Visual Cultures of Science: Rethinking Representational Practices in Knowledge Building and Science Communication

Front Cover
Luc Pauwels
UPNE, 2006 - Art - 299 pages
Issues of representation affect every aspect of scientific activity, from the encoding, display, analysis, and presentation of data to the communication of scientific concepts and information to students and the general public. The essays in this collection explore the issues involved in the creation and deployment of visual representations in both the natural and the social sciences.

Visual Cultures of Science offers a mix of theoretical analyses and revealing case studies. The latter address such topics as the technologies of visualization (from X-ray machines to films made by anthropologists), the persuasive power of the graphic presentation of data (including a critique of the work of Edward Tufte), and the distillation of data into pedagogical representations such as scientific wall charts for classroom use. With its useful mix of theory and case study, the book addresses both abstract and practical issues of representation, as well as demonstrating the importance of recognizing historicized perspectives in addressing issues of representation.

These essays, by many of the field’s leading minds today, offer solid research and new information pertaining to the methods, purposes, and implications of scientific visual culture.
 

Contents

Representational Practices in Knowledge Building
1
Vision and ReVision
26
A History and Philosophy
41
The Accursed Part of Scientific Iconography
63
Wall Charts
90
Expression Multivocality
120
Paulings Theory
153
Edward Tufte and the Promise of a Visual Social Science
222
Visual Literacy
266
Contributors
285
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About the author (2006)

LUC PAUWELS is Associate Professor of Communication Science at the Univer-sity of Antwerp. His previous publications include De Verbeelde Samenleving (Ima-ging Society) and articles in Visual Studies, Visual Sociology, and Journal of Visual Literacy.

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