Chapter 1 Center-Periphery in Data Visualization: Concepts and
Methods
Part I Opening the Black Box
Chapter 2 Histories and Practices in MRI Early Development
Chapter 3 Inside the Laboratory: from Signal to Coils, from Images
to Bodies
Chapter 4 Visualizing Uncertainty in MRI Reinvention
Intermezzo Lives in the Grid
Part II Art-Science Collaboration
Chapter 5 Challenging the Neurorealism Fallacy through the Arts
Chapter 6 Archives and Laboratory Ethnography: Giving Bodies Back
to Data
Chapter 7 Bodily Sociotechnical Imaginaries in the Age of
Operational Images
Color Plates
Bibliography
Index
Silvia Casini is Lecturer in Film and Visual Culture at the University of Aberdeen. Her work has appeared in such journals as Configurations, Leonardo, and Contemporary Aesthetics.
“Giving Bodies Back to Data is a must-read book for a range of
readers: whether interested in understanding the journey leading to
the development of MRI technology, or the processes of artmaking in
an art and science context, they might find themselves becoming
inextricably entangled with and benefiting from both
approaches.”
—Roberta Buiani, Leonardo journal
“Casini’s ambitiously interdisciplinary approach offers a
powerful model for other arts and humanities researchers. It
raises pertinent conceptual and methodological questions about
contemporary art practice as knowledge production, building on
the work of anthropology and STS scholars that include
Tim Ingold, and Erin Manning and Brian
Massumi. Whilst art history often prioritizes a scholarly
focus on the final visual output of medical imaging
technologies, Casini’s approach suggests that we might be
equally well advised to consider the black-boxed processes
through which such images are produced.”
—Fiona Johnstone, Art History journal
“Such detailed and critical cross-disciplinary case studies as
Giving Bodies Back to Data in the field of art and science are rare
so far, and books like this one provide a more critical and precise
account of new imaging technologies than overview studies on image
and science. Ultimately, the biggest contribution of Casini’s
book is the compelling case it makes about the importance of
history when dealing with technology. Both those involved in
developing new technologies and those who use them would benefit
from understanding their situated histories where decisions in
their development entangle politics and economics with science,
aesthetics, creativity and disciplinary tensions across space and
time.”
—Anca-Simona Horvath and Viola Ruhse, The Senses and Society
journal
“In total, the book is an eminent contribution to the literature on
the embodied and situated practices of data visualizations.”
—H-Net Network on science, medicine and technology
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