Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Photini Vrikki , Hauke Riesch , Olwenn Martin , N. Stephens , Martin v. Melosi
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Kings College London, UK, Brunel University London
ANO 2020
TIPO Book
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 97F5453D3F51BDF5F61DCD2B8F0155C4
MD5 0F83904AE1DCA5940CD9D35B631D8C9C
MD5 F0DA03D499E852523E29F261850ADCF4

Resumo

On 22 April 2017, 10,000 people joined the March for Science London, one of 600 events globally asserting the importance of science against post-truth. Here we report an online and on-the-ground observational study of the London event in its distinct, post-Brexit referendum context. We analyse the motives for marchers' attendance, and their collective enactment of what science is and why and by what it is threatened. Drawing upon Interaction Ritual Theory and the concept of civic epistemology, we develop the notion of populist knowledge practices to capture the 'other' that marchers defined themselves against. We detail how this was performed, and how it articulated a particular vision for science–society relations in Britain. In closing, we argue that the March for Science is one in a chain of anti-populist activist events that retains collective effervescence while transcending specific framings.

Ferramentas