Mixing Humans and Nonhumans Together: The Sociology of a Door-Closer. Johnson, J. Social Problems, 35(3):298–310, 1988.
Mixing Humans and Nonhumans Together: The Sociology of a Door-Closer [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Is sociology the study of social questions, or is it the study of associations? In this paper the author takes the second position and extends the study of our associations to nonhumans. To make the argument clearer, the author chooses one very humble nonhuman, a door-closer, and analyzes how this "purely" technical artifact is a highly moral, highly social actor that deserves careful consideration. Then the author proposes a vocabulary to follow human and nonhuman relations without stopping at artificial divides between what is purely technical and what is social. The author builds "its" or "his" own text in such a way that the text itself is a machine that exemplifies several of the points made by the author. In particular, the author is constructed and deconstructed several times to show how many social actors are inscribed or prescribed by machines and automatisms.
@article{johnson_mixing_1988,
	title = {Mixing {Humans} and {Nonhumans} {Together}: {The} {Sociology} of a {Door}-{Closer}},
	volume = {35},
	issn = {0037-7791},
	shorttitle = {Mixing {Humans} and {Nonhumans} {Together}},
	url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/800624},
	doi = {10.2307/800624},
	abstract = {Is sociology the study of social questions, or is it the study of associations? In this paper the author takes the second position and extends the study of our associations to nonhumans. To make the argument clearer, the author chooses one very humble nonhuman, a door-closer, and analyzes how this "purely" technical artifact is a highly moral, highly social actor that deserves careful consideration. Then the author proposes a vocabulary to follow human and nonhuman relations without stopping at artificial divides between what is purely technical and what is social. The author builds "its" or "his" own text in such a way that the text itself is a machine that exemplifies several of the points made by the author. In particular, the author is constructed and deconstructed several times to show how many social actors are inscribed or prescribed by machines and automatisms.},
	number = {3},
	urldate = {2019-03-04},
	journal = {Social Problems},
	author = {Johnson, Jim},
	year = {1988},
	pages = {298--310}
}

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