Big Science or bricolage: An alternative model for research in technical communication

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2005

Abstract

Two research traditions inform contemporary technical communication research. With its physical science orientation and organizational capaciousness, the tradition of Big Science originated in the laboratory of Ernest O. Lawrence. With its humanistic orientation and individualistic singularity, the tradition of bricolage was identified in the fieldwork of Claude Lévi-Strauss. The current celebration of the former in technical communication research serves to reify a power-driven impulse for utility. The two cultures that result from such an impulse - the organizational professional and the academic researcher - have little common ground for research. To interrupt such harmful dynamics, an orientation to research is offered that celebrates successful past work in technological innovation, information design, the communication process, and the ways those processes emerge in specific contexts. To foster the continuation of such research, a community-based model is offered that draws its strength from the tradition of the bricoleur. © 2005 IEEE.

Identifier

27644448530 (Scopus)

Publication Title

IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication

External Full Text Location

https://doi.org/10.1109/TPC.2005.853932

ISSN

03611434

First Page

261

Last Page

268

Issue

3

Volume

48

Fund Ref

International Business Machines Corporation

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