BERNW ARD JOERGES AND HELGA NOWOTNY YET ANOTHER TURN The thing that
doesn't fit is the thing that's most interesting. Richard Fcynman This
volume was originally conceived as a contribution to yet another 'tum',
not cap- tured by one of the many adjectives that have served to
describe the collective meander- ing of the scholarly community in
search of direction, It was meant to mark the millen- nial turn, a
seemingly purely chronological event, but one in search for great
meanings and invested with loaded significances. The editors wanted to
seize the opportunity of the moment in order to pause and reflect on the
sociology and history of social studies of science and technology. The
moment came and went and the new millennium, barely nine months later,
thrust its historical marker upon the world through a horrendous and
cruel shock in an unforeseen and unforeseeable way. Since then, the
world appears more vulnerable and volatile, fragmented and fraught with
uncertainty. The universal values as bequeathed by the Enlightenment are
either refused or appear refuted. The dream of a universal civilization
which has accompanied the unfolding of the existing multiple modernities
in their historically unique trajectories, has been discarded and its
promises in tatters.