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The Epistemic Case for Sci-Art: Toward a Posthuman Praxis

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-14, 09:37 authored by Jacob Thompson-BellJacob Thompson-Bell

This article seeks to strengthen the epistemic case for sci-art by demonstrating how partnerships across paradigms can combine methodologies rooted in multiple knowledge traditions. Drawing on Robin Nelson’s multimodal conceptualization of artistic research and Bruno latour’s model of science as a circulatory system of heterogeneous human and nonhuman phenomena, the author characterizes sci-art as a form of posthuman praxis, which opens new epistemic positions through transversal forms of inquiry, thereby revealing shared human/nonhuman cultures. Sci-art is thus proposed as a means of drawing together humans and nonhumans into more productive, empathic associations.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Creative Arts (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Leonardo

Volume

56

Issue

3

Pages/Article Number

292-298

Publisher

MIT Press

ISSN

0024-094X

eISSN

1530-9282

Date Submitted

2021-12-21

Date Accepted

2022-08-25

Date of First Publication

2023-06-01

Date of Final Publication

2023-06-01

Relevant SDGs

  • SDG 17 - Partnerships to achieve the Goal

Open Access Status

  • Not Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2024-05-13

Publisher statement

This is the accepted version of Jacob Thompson-Bell; The Epistemic Case for Sci-Art: Toward a Posthuman Praxis. Leonardo 2023; 56 (3): 292–298. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/leon_a_02317. ©2023 ISAST