MIT CogNet, The Brain Sciences ConnectionFrom the MIT Press, Link to Online Catalog
SPARC Communities
Subscriber : Stanford University Libraries » LOG IN

space

Powered By Google 
Advanced Search

Selected Title Details  
Oct 1999
ISBN 0262024616
389 pp.
27 illus.
BUY THE BOOK
Sorting Things Out
Geoffrey C. Bowker and Susan Leigh Star

"Sorting Things Out is a brilliant dissection of a fundamental facet of social life. Its analytic comparisons shed new light on familiar problems which plague all the social sciences."
-- Howard S. Becker, University of California-Santa Barbara

What do a seventeenth-century mortality table (whose causes of death include "fainted in a bath," "frighted," and "itch"); the identification of South Africans during apartheid as European, Asian, colored, or black; and the separation of machine- from hand-washables have in common? All are examples of classification -- the scaffolding of information infrastructures.

In Sorting Things Out, Geoffrey C. Bowker and Susan Leigh Star explore the role of categories and standards in shaping the modern world. In a clear and lively style, they investigate a variety of classification systems, including the International Classification of Diseases, the Nursing Interventions Classification, race classification under apartheid in South Africa, and the classification of viruses and of tuberculosis.

The authors emphasize the role of invisibility in the process by which classification orders human interaction. They examine how categories are made and kept invisible, and how people can change this invisibility when necessary. They also explore systems of classification as part of the built information environment. Much as an urban historian would review highway permits and zoning decisions to tell a city's story, the authors review archives of classification design to understand how decisions have been made. Sorting Things Out has a moral agenda, for each standard and category valorizes some point of view and silences another. Standards and classifications produce advantage or suffering. Jobs are made and lost; some regions benefit at the expense of others. How these choices are made and how we think about that process are at the moral and political core of this work. The book is an important empirical source for understanding the building of information infrastructures.

Table of Contents
 Acknowledgments
 Introduction: To Classify Is Human
1 Some Tricks of the Trade in Analyzing Classification
I Classification and Large-Scale Infrastructures
2 The Kindness of Strangers: Kinds and Politics in Classification Systems
3 The ICD as Information Infrastructure
4 Classification, Coding, and Coordination
II Classification and Biography, or System and Suffering
5 Of Tuberculosis and Trajectories
6 The Case of Race Classification and Reclassification under Apartheid
III Classification and Work Practice
7 What Difference a Name Makes -- the Classification of Nursing Work
8 Organizational Forgetting, Nursing Knowledge, and Classification
IV The Theory and Practice of Classifications
9 Categorical Work and Boundary Infrastructures: Enriching Theories of Classification
10 Why Classifications Matter
 Notes
 References
 Name Index
 Subject Index
 
Options
Related Topics
Psychology, Cognitive Science


© 2010 The MIT Press
MIT Logo