Dr. Paul Rabinow
The Washington Post article Synthetic DNA on the Brink of Yielding New Life Forms said
It has been 50 years since scientists first created DNA in a test tube, stitching ordinary chemical ingredients together to make life’s most extraordinary molecule. Until recently, however, even the most sophisticated laboratories could make only small snippets of DNA — an extra gene or two to be inserted into corn plants, for example, to help the plants ward off insects or tolerate drought.
Now researchers are poised to cross a dramatic barrier: the creation of life forms driven by completely artificial DNA.
“This raises a range of big questions about what nature is and what it could be,” said Paul Rabinow, an anthropologist at the University of California at Berkeley who studies science’s effects on society. “Evolutionary processes are no longer seen as sacred or inviolable. People in labs are figuring them out so they can improve upon them for different purposes.”
Paul Rabinow, Ph.D. is
Professor of Anthropology at the University of California at Berkeley.
His work has consistently centered on modernity as a problem: problem
for those seeking to live with its diverse forms, a problem for those
seeking to advance
or resist modern projects of power and knowledge. This work has ranged
from descendants of a Moroccan saint coping with the changes wrought by
colonial and
post-colonial regimes, to the wide array of knowledges and power
relations entailed in the great assemblage of social planning in
France, to his work of the last decade on molecular biology and
genomics.
Paul now calls this approach an anthropology of reason. Anthropos +
logos.
Who are the humans at issue and what knowledges constitute them and
help them to understand themselves and their
environments?
His current research centers on developments in post-genomics and
molecular diagnostics. It seeks to invent an analytic framework to
understand the issues of bio-politics and bio-security. A related
research interest is the contemporary moral terrain with special
attention to “affect”.
Paul authored
Marking Time: On the Anthropology of the Contemporary,
Reflections on Fieldwork in Morocco,
French Modern: Norms and Forms of the Social Environment,
French DNA: Trouble in Purgatory,
Making PCR: A Story of Biotechnology,
Essays on the Anthropology of Reason,
Anthropos Today: Reflections on Modern Equipment, and
Symbolic Domination: Cultural Form and Historical Change in
Morocco,
coauthored
A Machine to Make a Future: Biotech Chronicles and
Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics,
edited
The Foucault Reader,
and
coedited
Interpretive Social Science: A Second Look,
The Essential Foucault, and
Rethinking the Subject: An Anthology of Contemporary European Social
Thought.
Read the
full list of his publications!
He was named “Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres” by the
French
Government in 1998. He received the University of Chicago Alumni
Association Professional Achievement Award in 2000. He was awarded the
visiting Chaire Internationale de Recherche Blaise Pascal at the
École Normale Supérieure for 2001–2. He was named STICERD
Distinguished Visiting
Professor at the BIOS Centre for the study of Bioscience, Biomedicine,
Biotechnology and Society, London School of Economics in 2004.
Paul earned his B.A. in 1965, his M.A. in 1967, and Ph.D. in 1970, all
in anthropology
from the University of Chicago.
Read
Humanity Reinvented:
Paul Rabinow has a birds-eye view of humanity in the crosshairs of
technological invention,
Assembling Ethics in an Ecology of Ignorance, and
Thoughts On The Concept of Biopower Today.