David Turnbull - 'Finding My Way Through Messy Contingencies: autoethnographic reflections on working in Social Studies of Science at Deakin University'

In this 2018 essay, David Turnbull describes her experience arriving at Deakin University in the late 1980s, and working in the Science Studies Unit with scholars such as Max Charlesworth, David Wade Chambers, and Helen Verran. Turnbull reflects on his arrival at Deakin University (when Max Charlesworth hired Turnbull partly on the basis of a letter Turnbull had published in the Melbourne-based newspaper The Age, on Karl Popper) as well as the broader history of Deakin STS.

License

All rights reserved.

Contributors

Created date

August 22, 2018

Cite as

Benjamin Nicoll. 22 August 2018, "David Turnbull - 'Finding My Way Through Messy Contingencies: autoethnographic reflections on working in Social Studies of Science at Deakin University'", STS Infrastructures, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 22 August 2018, accessed 21 November 2024. https://stsinfrastructures.org/content/david-turnbull-finding-my-way-through-messy-contingencies-autoethnographic-reflections