Nomadic Concepts

Biological Concepts and Their Careers beyond Biology

in Contributions to the History of Concepts
Author:
Jan Surman Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe jan.surman@gmail.com

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Katalin Stráner Leibniz Institute of European History stranerk@ceu.hu

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Peter Haslinger Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe peter.haslinger@herder-institut.de

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This article introduces a collection of studies of biological concepts crossing over to other disciplines and nonscholarly discourses. The introduction discusses the notion of nomadic concepts as introduced by Isabelle Stengers and explores its usability for conceptual history. Compared to traveling (Mieke Bal) and interdisciplinary (Ernst Müller) concepts, the idea of nomadism shifts the attention from concepts themselves toward the mobility of a concept and its effects. The metaphor of nomadism, as outlined in the introduction, helps also to question the relation between concepts' movement and the production of boundaries. In this way conceptual history can profit from interaction with translation studies, where similar processes were recently discussed under the notion of cultural translation.

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