PRACTISING COMPARISON Logics, Relations, Collaborations
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MATTERING PRESS Mattering Press is an academic-led Open Access publisher that operates on a not-for-profit basis as a UK registered charity. It is committed to developing new publishing models that can widen the constituency of academic knowledge and provide authors with significant levels of support and feedback. All books are available to download for free or to purchase as hard copies. More at matteringpress.org. The Press’s work has been supported by: Centre for Invention and Social Process (Goldsmiths, University of London), European Association for the Study of Science and Technology, Hybrid Publishing Lab, infostreams, Institute for Social Futures (Lancaster University), Open Humanities Press, and Tetragon. Making this book Mattering Press is keen to render more visible the unseen processes that go into the production of books. We would like to thank Joe Deville, who acted as the Press’s coordinating editor for this book, the reviewer Manuel Tironi, Jenn Tomomitsu for the copy-editing, Tetragon for the production and typesetting, Sarah Terry for the proofreading, and Ed Akerboom at infostreams for format- ting the html version of this book. Cover Browsing books, on- or offline, entails comparison, of covers amongst other things. Designing covers too entails comparison, of typefaces, for example. Typographic judgments of aesthetic, use, and conceptual value are settled by comparing different typefaces that, to the trained eye, mark particular histories of craft, production, and thought. Books on graphic design, such as Josef Müller- Brockmann’s great Grid Systems, establish ‘good’ typography by reference to a canon of classic, Latin typefaces, some of which you can compare, in practice, on this cover. Another tool of comparison, the Mango Maturity and Ripeness Guide, developed by the mango quality research team at the University of Florida and the University of California-Davis (available at www.mango.org), provides this cover with a colour scheme and its users with a means to establish if a mango is ‘ripe’ for consumption. Mattering Press thanks Łukasz Dziedzic for Lato, our incomparable cover typeface. It remains one of the best free typefaces available and is released by his foundry tyPoland under the free, libre and open source Open Font License. Cover art by Julien McHardy. PRACTISING COMPARISON Logics, Relations, Collaborations edited by joe deville, michael guggenheim, zuzana hrdlicˇková First edition published by Mattering Press, Manchester. Copyright © Joe Deville, Michael Guggenheim, and Zuzana Hrdličková, chapters by respective authors, 2016. Cover art © Julien McHardy, 2016. Text design, typesetting and eBook by Tetragon, London Freely available online at www.matteringpress.org/books/practising-comparison This is an open access book, and the text and cover art are licensed under a Creative Commons By Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license. Under this license, authors allow anyone to download, reuse, reprint, modify, distribute, and/or copy their work so long as the material is not used for commercial purposes and the authors and source are cited and resulting derivative works are licensed under the same or similar license. No permission is required from the authors or the publisher. Statutory fair use and other rights are in no way affected by the above. Read more about the license at creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ ISBN: 978-0-9931449-4-3 (pbk) ISBN: 978-0-9931449-5-0 (ebk) Mattering Press has made every effort to contact copyright holders and will be glad to rectify, in future editions, any errors or omissions brought to our notice. CONTENTS List of Figures 7 Contributors 9 Acknowledgements 15 1 · Introduction: The Practices and Infrastructures of Comparison Joe Deville, Michael Guggenheim, Zuzana Hrdličková 17 Section One: Logics 2 · Comparative Research: Beyond Linear-causal Explanation Monika Krause 45 3 · Cross Comparison: Comparisons across Architectural Displays of Colonial Power Alice Santiago Faria 68 Section Two: Collaborations 4 · Same, Same but Different: Provoking Relations, Assembling the Comparator Joe Deville, Michael Guggenheim, Zuzana Hrdličková 99 5 · Pulling Oneself Out of the Traps of Comparison: An Auto- ethnography of a European Project Madeleine Akrich and Vololona Rabeharisoa 130 6 · Frame Against the Grain: Asymmetries, Interference, and the Politics of EU Comparison Tereza Stöckelová 166 Section Three: Relations 7 · Lateral Comparisons Christopher Gad and Casper Bruun Jensen 189 8 · Comparative Tinkering with Care Moves Peter A. Lutz 220 9 · Comparing Comparisons: On Rankings and Accounting in Hospitals and Universities Sarah de Rijcke, Iris Wallenburg, Paul Wouters, Roland Bal 251 10 · Steve Jobs, Terrorists, Gentlemen, and Punks: Tracing Strange Comparisons of Biohackers Morgan Meyer 281 11 · Afterword: Spaces of Comparison Jennifer Robinson 306 LIST OF FIGURES Illustrations Fig. 1.1 Relative frequency of the terms ‘comparative sociology’ or ‘comparative anthropology’ in books scanned by Google 1950–2008 19 Fig. 3.1 Triumphal Arches (comparing by building type), J.N.L. Durand, 1799 73 Fig. 3.2 Neolithic gravestone vs. Corbusier’s Ronchamp tower, S. Giedion, 1968 77 Fig. 3.3 General Post Office, Calcutta, designed by W. Granville, 1864–1868 82 Fig. 3.4 Central Post Office, Panjim, Goa, designed by PWD, 1893 82 Fig. 3.5 Synchronised Timeline (establishment period shown in darker grey) 83 Fig. 3.6 Cathedral, Old Goa (sixteenth century) 85 Fig. 3.7 Victoria Terminus, Bombay (nineteenth century) 85 Fig. 4.1 A comparator chip 100 Fig. 4.2 The assembled comparator 108 Tables Table 5.1 Degree of stabilisation of issues vs. POs’ alignment to the biomedical world 138 7 CONTRIBUTORS Madeleine akrich is a professor at the Centre de sociologie de l’innovation (Mines ParisTech). After being devoted to the sociology of technology for several years, her work has centred on medicine: firstly, on a comparative study of obstetrical practices between France and the Netherlands, and secondly, on internet discussion groups that focus on health problems. More recently, with Vololona Rabeharisoa, she has coordinated a European project on the engage- ment of patient organisations with knowledge and the transformative effects it has on their form of activism (see the recent special issue of Biosocieties on ‘Evidence-Based Activism’, 2014). roland Bal is Professor of Healthcare Governance at Erasmus University Rotterdam. His research interests include science-policy-practice relations and governance infrastructures in healthcare. More recently, he has researched the creation of public accountabilities in healthcare, studying the ways in which public service organisations ‘organise for transparency’. He currently works with the Netherlands healthcare inspectorate in research projects on regulation and supervision. Roland’s focus is on ethnographic, interventionist research methods. Recent publications have appeared in, amongst other journals, Social Science & Medicine; Science, Technology, & Human Values; International Journal of Medical Informatics; and Public Administration. Joe deville is a lecturer at Lancaster University, based jointly in the Departments of Organisation, Work & Technology and Sociology, and is a co-director of the Centre for Mobilities Research. He completed his PhD at Goldsmiths in 2011 and published his first book,Lived Economies of Default, with Routledge in early 2015. He has written widely on issues of credit, debt, and disaster prepared- ness in journals including Sociological Review; Journal of Cultural Economy; and 9 practising coMparison Consumption Markets and Culture. He is also an editor for Mattering Press and Journal of Cultural Economy. christopher gad is Associate Professor at the IT-University of Copenhagen in the research group Technologies in Practice. His former and present research areas and interests include Science and Technology Studies, (post-)Actor- Network Theory, lateral thinking, ontological multiplicity and complexity, promises, aspirations and challenges related to information technologies, digi- talisation and computational thinking in theory and practice, ethnographic, virtual, micro-sociological, mixed, and non-foundationalist approaches, democ- racy, elections and disability, bureaucracy and organisational theory, fisheries inspection, and surveillance. Michael guggenheiM is a reader at Goldsmiths, University of London and a director of the Centre for Invention and Social Process (CSISP). He has pub- lished widely on social theory, disasters, buildings and inventive methods. Most recently he co-edited Disasters and Politics (Sociological Review Monograph series, Wiley-Blackwell, 2014) and published ‘The Media of Sociology: Tight and Loose Translations’ in the British Journal of Sociology. He is an editor of the journal Demonstrations: Journal for Experiments in Social Studies of Technology. alice santiago Faria is currently a research fellow at CHAM (FCSH, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa e Universidade dos Açores), and at the Centro Interuniversitário de História das Ciências e da Tecnologia (CIUHCT, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa and Universidade de Lisboa). She graduated in Architecture from Coimbra University (1997) and holds a PhD in Art History (Université de Paris I, 2011). Her research focuses on colonial public works in the Portuguese Empire during the long nineteenth century. She participated in the volume ‘Asia’ in Portuguese Heritage around the World: Architecture and Urbanism (Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 2010). ZuZana