Aramis, or The Love of Technology

Aramis, or The Love of Technology

Aramis, or The Love of Technology

Aramis, or The Love of Technology

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Overview

Bruno Latour has written a unique and wonderful tale of a technological dream gone wrong. The story of the birth and death of Aramis—the guided-transportation system intended for Paris—is told in this thought-provoking and fictional account by several different parties: an engineer and his professor; company executives and elected officials; a sociologist; and finally Aramis itself, who delivers a passionate plea on behalf of technological innovations that risk being abandoned by their makers. As the young engineer and professor follow Aramis’s trail—conducting interviews, analyzing documents, assessing the evidence—perspectives keep shifting: the truth is revealed as multilayered, unascertainable, comprising an array of possibilities worthy of Rashomon. This charming and profound book, part novel and part sociological study, is Latour at his thought-provoking best.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674265318
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 04/01/1996
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Bruno Latour was Professor Emeritus at Sciences Po Paris. He was the 2021 Kyoto Prize Laureate in Arts and Philosophy and was awarded the 2013 Holberg International Memorial Prize.

Table of Contents

Preface

Prologue: Who Killed Aramis?

1. An Exciting Innovation

2. Is Aramis Feasible?

3. Shilly-Shallying in the Seventies

4. Interphase: Three Years of Grace

5. The 1984 Decision: Aramis Exists for Real

6. Aramis at the CET Stage: Will It Keep Its Promises?

7. Aramis Is Ready to Go (Away)

Epilogue: Aramis Unloved

Glossary

What People are Saying About This

Aramis is a case study, a sociological investigation, and, yes, a detective novel unlike any ever written--a carefully constructed, non-fictional narrative of the negotiated fictions that underwrite our mechanical inventions. Latour, one of the most supple and rewarding practitioners of any science, shows that the construction of technological society is at base a human drama and must be told in a commensurate manner. Here at last is science studies that avoids self-exemption and partakes, with humor and emotion, of the very processes it depicts. Aramis is a strange but deep book that comes to counterintuitive, urgent conclusions, pleading for more successful parlay between technology and humanism, animate and inanimate, body and soul. This story has much to say about the world we want to build, the world we think we are building, and the worlds we have failed to pull off.

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