“Notes” in “Introduction: Everything is a Lab”
Notes
1. Wondrich, Punch; O’Neil, Fix the Pumps.
2. Lab Series website, https://www.labseries.com.
3. Hudson’s Bay Company, “Hudson’s Bay and Lord & Taylor Launch New Contemporary Private Brand Design Lab Lord & Taylor for Spring 2015.”
4. See Deleuze and Guattari, “Order-words,” 79–82.
5. Latour, “Give Me a Laboratory and I Will Raise the World,” 165.
6. Ibid., 168.
7. Ibid., 166.
8. Latour, We Have Never Been Modern, 13, 27.
9. Ibid., 27.
10. Ibid., 34.
11. Ibid., 11.
12. Alpers, “The Studio, the Laboratory and the Vexations of Art.”
13. Zielinski, Deep Time of the Media.
14. Marx, “Preface to the First Edition,” 89.
15. Bök, ’Pataphysics.
16. Galison, “Aufbau/Bauhaus.”
17. See Bruno, “Film, Aesthetics, Science.”
18. Latour and Woolgar, Laboratory Life, 30.
19. Mattern, “Intellectual Furnishing.”
20. Stengers, Power and Invention, 170.
21. Geoghegan, “After Kittler,” 70.
22. Siegert, Cultural Techniques, 2015.
23. Latour and Woolgar, Laboratory Life, 47.
24. Shaviro, Without Criteria, 61.
25. Urry, Mobilities, 253–254.
26. Gieryn, “Truth Is Also a Place.”
27. Latour and Woolgar, Laboratory Life, 64.
28. Ibid., 65.
29. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 40–41.
30. Latour and Woolgar, Laboratory Life, 58.
31. Ibid., 48.
32. Sterne, “The Example,” 22.
33. Sterne, Audible Past, 36.
34. Ibid., 42.
35. Bennett, “Civic Laboratories,” 527.
36. Ibid., 528.
37. The “interthing communication” that takes place in that network, Marc Steinberg proposes, is the precondition for the social function of those things, in that it allows the things to speak to people, and people to speak to each other through them as media. Media are irreducible to commodity products, but commodities are undeniably part of the infrastructure of our communication and making. Steinberg, Anime’s Media Mix, 91.
38. Star, “The Ethnography of Infrastructure,” 380–381.
39. Ibid., 381–382.
40. Siegert, Cultural Techniques, 5.
41. See Knorr Cetina, “The Couch, the Cathedral, and the Laboratory,” 121.
42. Burns, The Scientific Revolution, 164.
43. Žižek, The Sublime Object of Ideology, 44.
44. Zielinski, “Modelling Media for Ignatius Loyola.”
45. Parikka, What Is Media Archaeology?, 45.
46. Bruno, “Film, Aesthetics, Science,” 104.
47. Ibid., 91.
48. Ibid., 100.
49. Ibid., 109.
50. Feder, “Scrounging Old Equipment for New Experiments.” Scrounging could easily be described as part of the list of common laboratory techniques.
51. Sterne, “Headset Culture, Audile Technique, and Sound Space as Private Space,” 58.
52. Latour and Woolgar, Laboratory Life, 182.
53. Siegert, Cultural Techniques, 11.
54. du Gay et al., Doing Cultural Studies, 4.
55. See, for example, Angus, “The Materiality of Expression,” and Gitelman, Always Already New.
56. Latour and Woolgar, Laboratory Life, 243.
57. Bennett, “Civic Laboratories,” 525.
58. Rheinberger, On Historicizing Epistemology, 29.
59. Hacking, Representing and Intervening, 24.
60. Ibid., 36.
61. Hacking, Representing and Intervening, 36.
62. Knorr Cetina, “The Couch, the Cathedral and the Laboratory,” 128.
63. Ibid., 133.
64. Ibid., 135–136.
65. Picking, The Mangle of Practice, 562.
66. Ibid., 563.
67. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 11.
68. Ibid., 19.
69. Latour and Woolgar, Laboratory Life, 87.
70. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 20.
71. Marvin, When Old Technologies Were New, 15.
72. Ibid., 4.
73. Hacking, Representing and Intervening, 38–39. See also Bennett, “Civic Laboratories,” 522, 526.
74. Williams, Marxism and Literature, 126.
75. Hacking, “The Self-Vindication of the Laboratory Sciences,” 30.
76. Ibid., 30.
77. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 46.
78. Ibid., 46.
79. Ibid., 79.
80. Ibid., 149.
81. Latour, “Give Me a Laboratory and I Will Raise the World,” 142.
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