Aramis Or The Love Of Technology
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''Aramis, or the Love of Technology'', was written by French sociologist/
anthropologist An anthropologist is a person engaged in the practice of anthropology. Anthropology is the study of aspects of humans within past and present societies. Social anthropology, cultural anthropology and philosophical anthropology study the norms and ...
Bruno Latour. ''Aramis'' was originally published in French in 1993; the English translation by Catherine Porter, copyrighted in 1996, , is now in its fourth printing (2002). Latour describes his text as "scientifiction," which he describes as "a hybrid genre... for a hybrid task" (p. ix). The genre includes voices of a young engineer discussing his "sociotechnological initiation," his professor's commentary which introduces Actor-network theory (ANT), field documents - including real-life interviews, and the voice of Aramis—a failed technology (Latour, Bruno. (1996). Aramis, or the Love of Technology. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. x). The book is a quasi-mystery, which attempts to discover who killed
Aramis (personal rapid transit) The Aramis; English: ''Automated trains of independent modules in Stations''. was an experimental personal rapid transit (PRT) system developed in France for deployment in the Paris area. Aramis included the unique feature of non-mechanical plato ...
. Aramis was supposed to be implemented as a
Personal Rapid Transit Personal rapid transit (PRT), also referred to as podcars or guided/railed taxis, is a public transport mode featuring small low-capacity automated vehicles operating on a network of specially built guideways. PRT is a type of automated guideway ...
(PRT) system in Paris. Simultaneously, while investigating Aramis's demise, Latour delineates the tenets of Actor-network theory. Latour argues that the technology failed not because any particular actor killed it, but because the actors failed to sustain it through negotiation and adaptation to a changing social situation.


Table of contents

* Preface * Prologue: Who Killed Aramis? # An Exciting Innovation # Is Aramis Feasible? # Shilly-Shallying in the Seventies # Interphase: Three Years of Grace # The 1984 Decision: Aramis Exists for Real # Aramis at the CET Stage: Will it Keep its Promise? # Aramis is Ready to Go (Away) * Epilogue: Aramis Unloved * Glossary


See also

* '' Laboratory Life'' (with
Steve Woolgar Stephen William Woolgar (born 14 February 1950) is a British sociologist. He has worked closely with Bruno Latour, with whom he wrote '' Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts'' (1979). Education Stephen Woolgar holds a BA (Fi ...
) * ''Science in Action'' (book) * '' Politics of Nature'' * '' We Have Never Been Modern''


References

{{Bruno Latour 1993 books Actor-network theory Harvard University Press books Works by Bruno Latour Science and technology studies works