Fortress Science: The Spatialities of Radio Astronomy

Item

Title
Fortress Science: The Spatialities of Radio Astronomy
Description
The production of space as an internal condition to the scientific production of knowledge is an under investigated and seldom theorized process within the studies of science, technology, and society (STS), and the spatial disciplines. Through a comparative study of the world’s four leading radio telescopes (the Arecibo Observatory, the Atacama Millimeter/submillimeter Array, the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope, and MeerKAT), I examine the territorial, concentrated, and contingent spatialities of these scientific sites through the multidisciplinary lens of fortress science. Each telescope embodies differing spatial formations as a product of their institutional makeup, scientific goals, and political contexts, but exhibits similar spatial formations with regards to territorial transformations and human material concentrations. We can read these formations through the metaphor of the glacis, an historical fortress technology that acts as an obscuration in which apparent ‘emptiness’ conceals significant influence and connectivity. I draw on this analogy as an embodiment of the conceptual tools underlying the dissertation – that of technology and infrastructure, and landscape and territory – and I use these tools to position fortress science as structuring an analytical fusion of space and science. Spatial process is found to be enmeshed in the structure of scientific research itself, and as a result scientific production is found to alter, structure, and restructure space as an active force.
Creator
Trangos, Guy Jano
Subject
Infrastructure
Landscape
Production of space
Radio telescope
STS
Territory
Design
Science history
Architecture
Contributor
Brenner, Neil
Blau, Eve
Picon, Antoine
Date
2021-09-14T04:33:51Z
2021
2021-02-09
2021-03
2021-09-14T04:33:51Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Trangos, Guy Jano. 2020. Fortress Science: The Spatialities of Radio Astronomy. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
28264504
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37369495
0000-0003-3414-9359
Language
en