Author Archives: Shoko Yamada

Shoko Yamada is a postdoctoral fellow at Princeton University. Her work explores social and ethical life in the aftermath of environmental injury, drawing on long-term ethnographic engagements across a river basin in northcentral Japan.
A photo of a white spiral shell with sand in the backdrop.

Series: Theorizing Stuckness in Science and Technology

What might we learn by studying science and technology through the lens of stuckness? Stuckness is a ubiquitous experience in the everyday work of science and technology. Scientists are constantly frustrated with unexpected obstacles to their research plans (Messeri & Vertesi, 2015). Technologists who aspire to change the world often end up reproducing current structures of power (Rider, 2022). In popular discourse, scientific and technological practice has been associated with progress as steady betterment. As Leo Marx (2010) notes in tracing the emergence of the word “technology” in English, scientific and mechanical innovations became synonymous with social progress in the 19th century. And yet, getting stuck is a quotidian experience among experts in these fields, from experiments that fail to grant applications that are rejected. (read more...)