Published November 17, 2008
| Version v1
Journal article
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Boundary-work and the human--animal binary: Piltdown man, science and the media
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Description
The infamous Piltdown hoax offers an excellent opportunity to study how a
figure that straddled the human-animal boundary (both figuratively in its
positioning as a "missing link", and literally given its post-hoax status as a
modern human skull and a modern orangutan jaw) was made to fit dichotomous
understandings of it. The process of making this figure human reveals how
scientific claims in the disputed border zone between humans and non-human
animals are shaped by the cultural themes upon which the division stands.
Nationalism, race and species classification became enmeshed in the efforts to
lead Piltdown from its liminal position to more conceptually stable ground. The
result was a stretching of humanness, that brought Piltdown closer to us whilst
modern day "savages" where moved further away. The paper"s theoretical
framework shifts Gieryn"s boundary-work model from an ontology of culture to
an ontology of nature. Transplanting Gieryn"s model in this way is useful not
only because of the parallels specifically between the science-culture and
human-animal boundaries, but also as it serves as a reminder of the strong
relationship between the categorization of the social and natural worlds.
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