Abstract
Although the astonishing growth of the "new studies"-feminist, ethnic, cultural, and gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT)- and their achievements in paradigm shifting popularized interdisciplinarity in humanities and social-science circles during the 1980s, these fields did not innovate the synthesizing techniques and structures that make it possible to produce hybridized knowledges. Since the early twentieth century, scientists and scholars have launched hybrid fields across the boundaries separating not only their disciplines from one another but also academe from nonacademic sectors. In Crossing Boundaries: Knowledge, Disciplinarities, and Interdisciplinarities, Julie Thompson Klein traces interdisciplinary and cross-sector knowledge to the late-nineteenth-century project of land-grant universities and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which together set up stations in farming states to conduct research on agricultural problems and educate farmers about practical matters (175). It is no accident that Klein chose, as a pioneering example, a field that combined science and technology, research and application, for most interdisciplinary fields from about 1900 to the present have hybridized sciences and/or technologies-for instance, astrophysics, artificial intelligence, biochemistry, biomedical engineering, cybernetics, environmental studies, immunopharmacology, interfacial engineering, molecular biology, plate tectonics, radio astronomy, and solid-state physics.
Original language | English (US) |
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Title of host publication | Interdisciplinarity and Social Justice: Revisioning Academic Accountability |
Subtitle of host publication | Revisioning Academic Accountability |
Editors | Ranu Samantrai, Joe Parker, Mary Romero |
Place of Publication | Albany |
Publisher | State University of New York Press |
Pages | 301-320 |
Number of pages | 20 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781438431352 |
State | Published - 2010 |