Bruno Latour is Professor at the Center for the Study of Innovation at the School of Mines, Paris.
Review
"It is [the] world of machines that Latour sets out to rehabilitate in his clever new work...an eminently
readable book--even on occasions a ripping good yarn. This time round, the author of such seminal sociology of
science texts as We Have Never Been Modern has set out to do something daring: create a new genre, what he calls
'scientifiction'...The result is a hypertext, weaving real and fictional characters together against the backdrop
of an actual project carried out by RATP, the public transport authority for Paris...[A] feisty sociotechnological
whodunit."
--Margaret Wertheim, New Scientist
"Relationalists have to insist that made-found is as dubious as the value-fact and subject-object distinctions.
This claim is not easy to make plausible, but Latour is very good at doing so. He is perhaps the best contemporary
exponent of the philosophy of interchanges, of continuous passages across traditional dualisms and traditional
disciplinary borders. This is because he combines philosophical sophistication with genuine delight in empirical
fieldwork, a fluent and flexible style, an amazingly wide range of reference, and wit. Aramis is often hilarious.
In Catherine Porter's splendidly vigorous and idiomatic translation, it is a good read, a well-paced narrative
of instructive events. Any policy maker who contemplates spending public money on technological innovation should
read it before signing his or her first contractual agreement. It should also be read by anybody looking for some
genuinely fresh philosophical ideas."
--Richard Rorty, Voice Literary Supplement
"Mr. Latour, a French sociologist of science, is quite serious...about what he is creating--a new genre of
fiction and reality that tells a larger truth...[The Aramis project] may have been a wild goose chase, but some
honkers end up in the oven. Aramis, or the Love of Technology, in this translation by Catherine Porter, comes out
the way a game bird should, au point, juicy and delicious."
--M. R. Montgomery, New York Times Book Review
"Aramis shows with wonderful clarity the many different stories which were told about all aspects of Aramis."
--David Edgerton, Times Literary Supplement
"On the basis of a detailed empirical study, [Latour] has written three books in one: a detective novel, in
which a young sociology professor and a young engineer play the parts of Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson; a scholarly
treatise introducing the modern sociology of technology; and a reproduction of original archival documents...Latour's
book...offer[s] important insights into the sociotechnical domain and engineering practices that transcend the
Aramis case. It also provides, mainly in the form of methodological discussions, the groundwork for a theory of
technology and society...I think [this] is Latour's best book so far."
--Wiebe E. Bijker, Nature
"Aramis...uncovers the limits of sociology in its failure to recognize our essentially social relationship
with technical artifacts. Its critical force comes from using ethnography to enable technology to speak, or rather,
by allowing us to hear the voice of technology speaking indirectly through administrative documents, political
rhetoric, engineering specifications, business plans, fiction, and philosophy."
--Peter Lyman, Contemporary Sociology
"Aramis is a case study, a sociological investigation, and, yes, a detective novel unlike any ever written--a
carefully constructed, non-fictional narrative of the negotiated fictions that underwrite our mechanical inventions.
Latour, one of the most supple and rewarding practitioners of any science, shows that the construction of technological
society is at base a human drama and must be told in a commensurate manner. Here at last is science studies that
avoids self-exemption and partakes, with humor and emotion, of the very processes it depicts. Aramis is a strange
but deep book that comes to counterintuitive, urgent conclusions, pleading for more successful parlay between technology
and humanism, animate and inanimate, body and soul. This story has much to say about the world we want to build,
the world we think we are building, and the worlds we have failed to pull off."
--Richard Powers, Author, Galatea 2.2
Harvard University Press Web Site, December, 2003
Summary
Bruno Latour has written a unique and wonderful tale of a technological dream gone wrong. As the young engineer
and professor follow Aramis's trail--conducting interviews, analyzing documents, assessing the evidence--perspectives
keep shifting: the truth is revealed as multilayered, unascertainable, comprising an array of possibilities worthy
of Rashomon. The reader is eventually led to see the project from the point of view of Aramis, and along the way
gains insight into the relationship between human beings and their technological creations. This charming and profound
book, part novel and part sociological study, is Bruno Latour at his thought-provoking best.