In:
Public Understanding of Science, SAGE Publications, Vol. 18, No. 6 ( 2009-11), p. 634-652
Kurzfassung:
This article works with the figure of the “modest witness” and the concept of “virtual witnessing” to explore the case of the South Korean scientist, Hwang, whose stem cell breakthroughs are now regarded as hoaxes. We analyze the rhetorical techniques used by the scientific establishment and news media to first endorse, and then disavow, Hwang’s work. In particular, we focus on how the rhetoric of disavowal operates to maintain a dominant understanding of the normal relationship between science and the media. We highlight how journalists and scientists framed the original breakthroughs in ways which obscured the mediation of these events, but, once the scandals emerged, began to foreground the media as a problem. This retrospective acknowledgement of mediation also subtly (re)assigned the problem to the world of celebrity scientists and fictional genres and narratives. This lets news reporting, and routine science—journalist relations off the hook.
Materialart:
Online-Ressource
ISSN:
0963-6625
,
1361-6609
DOI:
10.1177/0963662509338324
Sprache:
Englisch
Verlag:
SAGE Publications
Publikationsdatum:
2009
ZDB Id:
33479-0
ZDB Id:
1421272-9
SSG:
11
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