Lynch1988b
Lynch1988b | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Lynch1988b |
Author(s) | Michael Lynch |
Title | Sacrifice and the transformation of the animal body into a scientific object: Laboratory culture and ritual practice in the neurosciences |
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Tag(s) | EMCA, Ethnomethodology, Sacrifice, Objects, Neuroscience |
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Year | 1988 |
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Journal | Social Studies of Science |
Volume | 18 |
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Pages | 265-289 |
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Abstract
The term `sacrifice' is used by experimental biologists to describe methods for killing laboratory specimens. In Western societies, `sacrifice' usually connotes a process of `making sacred', a process Durkheim and his followers interpreted as a ritual transformation between `profane' and `sacred' realms. This paper examines whether `sacrifice' in the experimental context bears any relation to such traditional usage, or whether, as animal rights advocates argue, the term is no more than a euphemism for brutal and unnecessary slaughter. Drawing on ethnographic observations of laboratory practice, the paper argues that `sacrifice' means much more than simply killing a specimen, and that the violence done to the animal victim is part of a systematic `consecration' of its body to transform it into a bearer of transcendental significances. While scientists do not treat their practices as ceremonial rituals endowed with religious meaning, laboratory `sacrifice' is a part of a sequence of procedures through which the naturalistic animal body is transformed into an abstracted analytic object with generalized significance for members of the research community.
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