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In this book, a leading authority in the field of social theory and communication shows how scientific practice is a rhetorical and narrative activity, a story well told. Richard Harvey Brown develops the idea of science as narration, casts various scientific disciplines as literary genres, and argues that expert knowledge of any kind is a form of power. He then explains how a narrative view of science can help integrate science within a democratic civic discourse.
| Preface | ||
| Acknowledgments | ||
| 1 | Scientific Knowledge, Rhetorical Criticism, and Civic Communication | 1 |
| 2 | Textuality, Social Science, and Society: Toward a Scientific Discourse for Civic Competence | 20 |
| 3 | Social Science and the Poetics of Public Truth | 40 |
| 4 | Science and Storytelling: Creating Truths through Narratives of Conversion | 64 |
| 5 | Narrative and Truth in Scientific Practice | 93 |
| 6 | Modern Science: Institutionalization of Knowledge and Rationalization of Power | 122 |
| 7 | Poetics, Politics, and Professionalization in the Rise of American Psychology | 153 |
| 8 | Toward a Field Theory of Knowledge/Power in Science and Civic Life | 174 |
| 9 | Democratic Science in Practice: The Experience of the Environmental Justice Movement | 193 |
| 10 | Science and Citizenship in a Technicist Culture | 214 |
| Notes | 227 | |
| References | 235 | |
| Index | 279 |
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