Chapter 1. Introduction Part I - STS Concepts and Sensitivities Chapter 2. Conceptual Framings: STS Research for Science Communication Chapter 3. What does an STS approach to Science Communication Look Like? Part II - Mobilizing STS Concepts and Sensitivities: The Case Studies Chapter 4. Object Biographies: The Life of a Hacked Gene Gun - Tybjerg, Karin; Whiteley, Louise; Davies, Sarah R. Chapter 5. Public Science and Public Space: Communicating Ecologies through Landscape Design - Owens, Marcus Chapter 6. Visual Climate Communication: Making Facts and Concerns in Popular Science Magazines - Born, Dorothea Chapter 7. Public Health Communication: Anecdotal Evidence and Responsibility in Print Media Accounts of Obesity - Felt, Ulrike Chapter 8. Constructing Science in Public: Framing Synthetic Yeast in News Media - Szymanski, Erika Chapter 9. Science, Emotion, and Identity Online: Constructing Science and Selves on "I Fucking Love Science" - Marsh, Oliver Chapter 10. Coproducing Knowledge and Nation States: Nutrition Communication and the making of Citizens - Ben Shachar, Teharlev Erela; Davidovitch, Nadav Chapter 11. Communicating Forensic Genetics: "Enthusiastic" Publics and the Management of Expectations - Amelung, Nina; Granja, Rafaela; Machado, Helena Part III - Concluding Thoughts Chapter 12. Connections, Assemblages, and Open Ends
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Exploring Science Communication brilliantly demonstrates how Science Communication can be enhanced and elaborated through an engagement with Science and Technology Studies. Analytically and empirically, the volume traces the complex roles of Science Communication in the making and doing of science, publics and politics. Essential reading for both analysts and practitioners. -- Mike Michael Science communication emerges as much more than getting new knowledge 'out' to larger society. Through a series of insightful contributions, science communication is revealed as shaping both science and society, re-imagining our socio-technical futures and creating narratives of governance, responsibility and change. Seen from an STS perspective, science communication 'matters' in important, challenging and unexpected ways. -- Alan Irwin