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Communicating Science
Professional, Popular, Literary

Ideal for students and practitioners in science, engineering and medicine, this book gives an insight into science's place in society.

Nicholas Russell (Author)

9780521113830, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 15 October 2009

350 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.4 cm, 0.68 kg

'… well worth a second or even a third reading …' physicsworld.com

Governments and scientific establishments have been encouraging the development of professional and popular science communication. This book critically examines the origin of this drive to improve communication, and discusses why simply improving scientists' communication skills and understanding of their audiences may not be enough. Written in an engaging style, and avoiding specialist jargon, this book provides an insight into science's place in society by looking at science communication in three contexts: the professional patterns of communication among scientists, popular communication to the public, and science in literature and drama. This three-part framework shows how historical and cultural factors operate in today's complex communication landscape, and should be actively considered when designing and evaluating science communication. Ideal for students and practitioners in science, engineering and medicine, this book provides a better understanding of the culture, sociology and mechanics of professional and popular communication.

Introduction: what this book is about and why you might want to read it
Prologue: three orphans share a common paternity: professional science communication, popular journalism, and literary fiction are not as separate as they seem
Part I. Professional Science Communication: 1. Spreading the word: the endless struggle to publish professional science
2. Walk like an Egyptian: the alien feeling of professional science writing
3. The future's bright? Professional science communication in the age of the internet
4. Counting the horse's teeth: professional standards in science's barter economy
5. Separating the wheat from the chaff: peer review on trial
Part II. Science for the Public: What Science Do People Need and How Might They Get It?: 6. The Public Understanding of Science (PUS) movement and its problems
7. Public engagement with science and technology (PEST): fine principle, difficult practice
8. Citizen scientists? Democratic input into science policy
9. Teaching and learning science in schools: implications for popular science communication
Part III. Popular Science Communication: The Press and Broadcasting: 10. What every scientist should know about mass media
11. What every scientist should know about journalists
12. The influence of new media
13. How the media represents science
14. How should science journalists behave?
Part IV. The Origins of Science in Cultural Context: Five Historic Dramas: 15. A terrible storm in Wittenberg: natural knowledge through sorcery and evil
16. A terrible storm in the Mediterranean: controlling nature with white magic and religion
17. Thieving magpies: the subtle art of false projecting
18. Foolish virtuosi: natural philosophy emerges as a distinct discipline but many cannot take it seriously
19. Is scientific knowledge 'true' or should it just be 'truthfully' deployed?
Part V. Science in Literature: 20. Science and the Gothic: the three big nineteenth-century monster stories
21. Science fiction: serious literature of ideas or low-grade entertainment?
22. Science in British literary fiction
23. Science on stage: the politics and ethics of science in cultural and educational contexts.

Subject Areas: Educational: Sciences, general science [YQS], Popular science [PDZ], History of science [PDX], Impact of science & technology on society [PDR], Philosophy of science [PDA], Business communication & presentation [KJP], Communication studies [GTC]

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