Interpretative methods as interventions: revisiting methods as epistemic practices in STS

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Abstract

Science and Technology Studies (STS) scholarship explores the production and institutional contexts of scientific knowledge. As such, it has examined research methods in both the natural and social sciences, framing such methods as necessarily intervening in the worlds they describe and explore. We discuss central concepts that STS mobilizes to engage with methods, in particular by introducing the notion of the “method assemblage ” and its implications for interpretive methods. In doing so, we draw on our academic work to describe key ways in which STS has characterized research methods and to discuss what this might mean for other accounts of interpretive approaches. We argue that, as with any other method assemblage, interpretive methods can be understood as performative epistemic practices that enact the worlds – social, natural, political, and historical – that they purport to describe.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationHandbook of Interpretive Research Methods.
EditorsMichaela Pfadenhauer, Margarethe Kusenbach
PublisherElgar
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2025

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 504028 Sociology of technology
  • 509025 Technology studies

Keywords

  • Science and technology studies (STS)
  • Methods of social research
  • interpretive methodology

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