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      Real Vegan Cheese and the Artistic Critique of Biotechnology

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          Abstract

          Drawing on the case study of Real Vegan Cheese (RVC), a synthetic biology project housed in a community lab or “biohackerspace,” I argue that biohacking performs an “artistic critique” of the bioeconomy. Following Boltanski and Chiapello’s use of the term, the “artistic critique” pits values of autonomy and creativity against a view of capitalist production as standardized and alienating, represented (in the case of biotechnology) by Monsanto’s monoculture GMOs. In this way, biohacking is depicted as liberating biotechnology from the constraints of corporate and academic institutions. Through the use of design fiction and a playful aesthetic, projects such as RVC demonstrate a more legitimate––with respect to the values of the artistic critique––mode of production for a new generation of biotechnology products, one that is portrayed as driven primarily by ethical and aesthetic values rather than the profit motive. This analysis highlights the role that aesthetic and affective strategies play in advancing particular sociotechnical visions, and the way that biohacking projects operate in symbiosis with incumbent institutions even as they define themselves in opposition to them. Finally, it suggests that biohacking has certain limitations when considered as a form of public engagement with science.

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          Managing Legitimacy: Strategic and Institutional Approaches

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            Research groups as ‘quasi-firms’: the invention of the entrepreneurial university

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              Public engagement as a means of restoring public trust in science--hitting the notes, but missing the music?

              This paper analyses the recent widespread moves to 'restore' public trust in science by developing an avowedly two-way, public dialogue with science initiatives. Noting how previously discredited and supposedly abandoned public deficit explanations of 'mistrust' have actually been continually reinvented, it argues that this is a symptom of a continuing failure of scientific and policy institutions to place their own science-policy institutional culture into the frame of dialogue, as possible contributory cause of the public mistrust problem. Copyright 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                101726548
                47557
                Engag Sci Technol Soc
                Engag Sci Technol Soc
                Engaging science, technology, and society
                2413-8053
                10 May 2018
                2017
                25 June 2018
                : 3
                : 180-205
                Affiliations
                Stanford University
                Author notes
                [1 ]Rebecca Wilbanks, rrw@ 123456stanford.edu
                Article
                NIHMS963728
                10.17351/ests2017.53
                6018000
                29951587
                fa662fdd-b749-400a-807f-6187d8574a7e

                Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd).

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                Categories
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                diybio,hacking,synthetic biology,design fiction,scientific authority,public engagement

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