Life beyond information: Contesting life and the body in history and molecular biology

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Life beyond information : Contesting life and the body in history and molecular biology. / Bencard, Adam.

Contested Categories: Life Sciences in Society. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2016. p. 135-154.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bencard, A 2016, Life beyond information: Contesting life and the body in history and molecular biology. in Contested Categories: Life Sciences in Society. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, pp. 135-154. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315573977-8

APA

Bencard, A. (2016). Life beyond information: Contesting life and the body in history and molecular biology. In Contested Categories: Life Sciences in Society (pp. 135-154). Taylor and Francis/Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315573977-8

Vancouver

Bencard A. Life beyond information: Contesting life and the body in history and molecular biology. In Contested Categories: Life Sciences in Society. Taylor and Francis/Routledge. 2016. p. 135-154 https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315573977-8

Author

Bencard, Adam. / Life beyond information : Contesting life and the body in history and molecular biology. Contested Categories: Life Sciences in Society. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2016. pp. 135-154

Bibtex

@inbook{5a3ed3e1da93456787133318c17f0cff,
title = "Life beyond information: Contesting life and the body in history and molecular biology",
abstract = "This chapter is a study of parallel obsessions; of intangible wires crossed, creating sparks of metaphors and bursts of imaginative energy. These obsessions run complicated courses through two seemingly distant scientific landscapes, those of molecular biology and history, but, as I will attempt to map out, there is a sense in which the preoccupations of post-genomic scientists and complexity-sensitive historians share a similar sense of a reconfiguration of their subject matter. Within molecular biology, this reconfiguration is tied to the intense interest in the protein, which increasingly is occupying centre-stage in post-genomic research; in this new development in the life sciences, life scientists {\textquoteleft}can be seen turning from matters of code to matters of substance - that is, from spelling out linear gene sequences to inquiring after the three-dimensional materiality, structure, and function of the protein molecules{\textquoteright} (Myers 2008, 163). This turn from matters of code to matters of substance is, as I will argue, echoed and reverberated in the preoccupations of a new orientation with the historical study of the body in history. Within history, and even in the humanities more generally, there seems to be a renewed desire to examine ourselves and the subjects we investigate as part of a material world, rather than one made from codes, language, symbols and discourses; as one German philosopher writes, it is as if {\textquoteleft}we found ourselves in the middle of time and in the middle of objects, with a desire to become part of this material world{\textquoteright} (Gumbrecht 2008: 522).",
author = "Adam Bencard",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2009 Susanne Bauer and Ayo Wahlberg.",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.4324/9781315573977-8",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780754676188",
pages = "135--154",
booktitle = "Contested Categories",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis/Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Life beyond information

T2 - Contesting life and the body in history and molecular biology

AU - Bencard, Adam

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2009 Susanne Bauer and Ayo Wahlberg.

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - This chapter is a study of parallel obsessions; of intangible wires crossed, creating sparks of metaphors and bursts of imaginative energy. These obsessions run complicated courses through two seemingly distant scientific landscapes, those of molecular biology and history, but, as I will attempt to map out, there is a sense in which the preoccupations of post-genomic scientists and complexity-sensitive historians share a similar sense of a reconfiguration of their subject matter. Within molecular biology, this reconfiguration is tied to the intense interest in the protein, which increasingly is occupying centre-stage in post-genomic research; in this new development in the life sciences, life scientists ‘can be seen turning from matters of code to matters of substance - that is, from spelling out linear gene sequences to inquiring after the three-dimensional materiality, structure, and function of the protein molecules’ (Myers 2008, 163). This turn from matters of code to matters of substance is, as I will argue, echoed and reverberated in the preoccupations of a new orientation with the historical study of the body in history. Within history, and even in the humanities more generally, there seems to be a renewed desire to examine ourselves and the subjects we investigate as part of a material world, rather than one made from codes, language, symbols and discourses; as one German philosopher writes, it is as if ‘we found ourselves in the middle of time and in the middle of objects, with a desire to become part of this material world’ (Gumbrecht 2008: 522).

AB - This chapter is a study of parallel obsessions; of intangible wires crossed, creating sparks of metaphors and bursts of imaginative energy. These obsessions run complicated courses through two seemingly distant scientific landscapes, those of molecular biology and history, but, as I will attempt to map out, there is a sense in which the preoccupations of post-genomic scientists and complexity-sensitive historians share a similar sense of a reconfiguration of their subject matter. Within molecular biology, this reconfiguration is tied to the intense interest in the protein, which increasingly is occupying centre-stage in post-genomic research; in this new development in the life sciences, life scientists ‘can be seen turning from matters of code to matters of substance - that is, from spelling out linear gene sequences to inquiring after the three-dimensional materiality, structure, and function of the protein molecules’ (Myers 2008, 163). This turn from matters of code to matters of substance is, as I will argue, echoed and reverberated in the preoccupations of a new orientation with the historical study of the body in history. Within history, and even in the humanities more generally, there seems to be a renewed desire to examine ourselves and the subjects we investigate as part of a material world, rather than one made from codes, language, symbols and discourses; as one German philosopher writes, it is as if ‘we found ourselves in the middle of time and in the middle of objects, with a desire to become part of this material world’ (Gumbrecht 2008: 522).

U2 - 10.4324/9781315573977-8

DO - 10.4324/9781315573977-8

M3 - Book chapter

AN - SCOPUS:85106467043

SN - 9780754676188

SP - 135

EP - 154

BT - Contested Categories

PB - Taylor and Francis/Routledge

ER -

ID: 305175923