Limits of Narrative Science: Unnarratability and Neonarrative in Evolutionary Biology

IF 0.4 4区 文学 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM
Daniel A. Newman
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Abstract:Narrative is increasingly promoted for improving science communication and thus combatting misinformation and facilitating fact-based education and policy (Dahlstrom 2014; ElShafie 2018). This instrumental use of narrative is laudable, but current approaches tend to be reductive and therefore potentially counterproductive. Most proponents of narrative science view narrative as a mere formula, often derived from entertainment (Luna 2013; Olson 2015; Loverd et al. 2018). Sceptics rightly worry that using narrative formats in this way oversimplifies and distorts scientific information. Given the social, medical, and environmental urgency of effective and accurate scientific communication, the shortcomings and promise of narrativizing science represent a limit-case for the applicability and scope of narrative theory and practice. In the context of narrative science, this essay begins by examining two valences of the term “limits of narrative.” First, it criticizes the current project of narrativizing science for failing to recognize narrative’s limited capacity to handle complex scientific models and phenomena, which H. Porter Abbott has upheld as exemplary cases of the “unnarratable” (2008: 227). The second valence of “limits” emerges as a response to the first. Although scientific information often eludes narrativity, what is unnarratable now may become narratable tomorrow. As Robyn Warhol suggests, attempts to render the unnarratable can create newly narratable ground, which she calls “neonarrative” (2005: 221). That is, new narrative forms arise at the limits of the narratable. This is a territory where scientists, like experimental novelists, struggle to express new, counterintuitive models, theories or results. What biologist Lewis Wolpert calls “the unnatural nature of science” (1998)—its resistance to commonsense notions of causality and ontology—could just as well be called the unnarratable nature of science. The essay argues that an effective use of narrative in science would need to accept the limits of narrative, probing for neonarrative footholds at those limits; those neonarrative forms would likely be challenge or violate the narrative templates audiences bring to texts of various kinds. By way of illustration, the article analyzes willfully artificial elements in diagrams depicting coevolution between pollinators and plants (Nilsson 1988; Pauw et al. 2009), a narrative whose agents and events are relative statistical values rather than discrete entities. By foregrounding the “synthetic aspect” of their characters (Phelan 1989), these diagrams showcase how scientific texts use the communicative efficacy of narrative without sacrificing accuracy or complexity.
叙事科学的极限:进化生物学中的不可叙事性和新叙事性
摘要:叙事越来越多地促进科学传播,从而打击错误信息,促进基于事实的教育和政策(Dahlstrom 2014;ElShafie 2018)。这种对叙事的工具性使用是值得称赞的,但目前的方法往往是简化的,因此可能适得其反。大多数叙事科学的支持者认为叙事仅仅是一种公式,通常来源于娱乐(Luna 2013;奥尔森2015;Loverd等人,2018)。怀疑论者有理由担心,以这种方式使用叙事格式会过度简化和扭曲科学信息。鉴于社会、医疗和环境对有效和准确的科学传播的紧迫性,叙事科学的缺点和前景代表了叙事理论和实践的适用性和范围的限制。在叙事学的背景下,本文首先考察了“叙事极限”一词的两种价值。首先,它批评了目前的科学叙事项目,因为它没有认识到叙事处理复杂科学模型和现象的有限能力,而H.波特·阿博特(H. Porter Abbott)认为这些模型和现象是“不可叙事”的典型案例(2008:227)。“限制”的第二价是对第一价的回应。虽然科学信息常常无法被叙述,但现在无法叙述的东西,明天可能就可以叙述了。正如罗宾·沃霍尔(Robyn Warhol)所建议的那样,试图渲染不可叙述的事物可以创造新的可叙述的领域,她称之为“新叙述”(2005:221)。也就是说,新的叙事形式出现在可叙述的极限上。在这个领域,科学家就像实验小说家一样,努力表达新的、违反直觉的模型、理论或结果。生物学家Lewis Wolpert所说的“科学的非自然性”(1998)——它对因果关系和本体论的常识性概念的抵制——也可以被称为科学的不可叙述性。本文认为,在科学中有效地使用叙事需要接受叙事的局限性,并在这些局限性中探索新的叙事立足点;这些新叙事形式可能会挑战或违反观众带给各种文本的叙事模板。通过说明,文章故意分析了传粉者和植物之间共同进化的图表中的人为因素(Nilsson 1988;Pauw et al. 2009),一种叙事,其主体和事件是相对的统计值,而不是离散的实体。通过突出人物的“综合方面”(Phelan 1989),这些图表展示了科学文本如何在不牺牲准确性或复杂性的情况下利用叙事的沟通效果。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: Partial Answers is an international, peer reviewed, interdisciplinary journal that focuses on the study of literature and the history of ideas. This interdisciplinary component is responsible for combining analysis of literary works with discussions of historical and theoretical issues. The journal publishes articles on various national literatures including Anglophone, Hebrew, Yiddish, German, Russian, and, predominately, English literature. Partial Answers would appeal to literature scholars, teachers, and students in addition to scholars in philosophy, cultural studies, and intellectual history.
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