The First Swede in Space: The Making of a Public Science Hero

Authors

  • Andreas Gunnarsson The Section for Science and Technology Studies, Gothenburg University, Sweden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3384/cu.2000.1525.0919137

Keywords:

Christer Fuglesang, cyborg, popularisation, science hero, space travel, Sweden

Abstract

The first Swede in space, Christer Fuglesang, has become an iconic figure for the popularisation of science in Sweden. Named as Sweden’s first astronaut in 1992, Fuglesang remained a relatively anonymous and somewhat derisory figure prior to his space launch in 2006. After his space mission, however, Fuglesang has become the very personification of science in Swedish society. In this paper, the transformation of Fuglesang’s public persona and his construction as a Swedish public science hero is analysed in detail. It is discussed how after 2006, Fuglesang can be seen as providing confirmation, both of the existence of a cultural gap separating science from society, and of the ability of certain heroic individuals to bridge this gap in a way that renders it more appreciable to a larger public.

In the main part of the paper, three aspects of Fuglesang’s elevation into a Swedish public science hero are discussed: First, the cyborg metaphor is used to analyse the fearlessness Fuglesang expresses towards yielding to, and entering into close communion with science and technology. Second, the transcendence of earthly perspective aspired to by science for so long, and apparently realized through space travel, is discussed in relation to Fuglesang’s personal experiences of space. Third, the inseparability of Fuglesang’s nationality from his heroism is discussed. It was only through the repeated flagging of his Swedishness that Fuglesang’s routine space mission gained any particular significance enabling it to be communicated as a major scientific event.

Finally, closer attention is paid to the scientific message Fuglesang is delivering to Swedish society. It is argued that he acts to promote renewed faith and confidence in the ability of science to open up new horizons for the future. The task of the public science hero is to help enable these new horizons to colonize the public imagination.

References

Aftonbladet (2007): ”Himlar en sån superstjärna – Tusentals fans hyllade Christer Fuglesang”, January 27th.

Arendt, Hannah (1958): The Human Condition, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Bensaude-Vincent, Bernadette (2001): ”A Genealogy of the Increasing Gap Between Science and the Public”, Public Understanding of Science, 10:1, 99-113. [Read this article]

Billig,Michael (1995): Banal Nationalism, London, Thousand Oaks, New Delhi: SAGE Publications.

Bryld, Mette and Nina Lykke (2000): Cosmodolphins: Feminist Studies of Technology, Animals and the Sacred, London: Zed.

Bucchi, Massimiano (1996): ”When Scientists Turn to the Public: Alternative Routes in Science Communication”, Public Understanding of Science, 5:4, 375-394. [Read this article]

Carlsson, Ella (2007): Framåt Mars!, Stockholm: Farenheit.

Clynes, Manfred E. and Nathan S. Kline (1960/1995): ”Cyborgs and Space”, Gray, Chris Hables (ed.): The Cyborg Handbook, New York and London: Routledge.

Cosgrove, Denis E. (2001): Apollo’s Eye: A Cartographic Genealogy of the Earth in the Western Imagination, Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press.

Dagens Nyheter (1992): ”Fuglesang vår man i rymden”, May 16th.

Dunbar, Robin (1995): The Trouble With Science, London: Faber and Faber.

EU (2005): Europeans, Science and Technology, Special Eurobarometer 224, Brussels: European Commission.

Expressen (1995): ”Förste svensken i rymden”, March 17th.

Expressen (2003): ”Intervju. Christer Fuglesang. ’Om 20 år landar vi på Mars’”, March 30th.

Felt, Ulrike (2000): ”Why Should the Public ‘Understand’ Science? A Historical Perspective on Aspects of the Public Understanding of Science”, Dierkes, Meinolf and Claudia von Grote (eds.): Between Understanding and Trust. The Public, Science and Technology, Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers.

Fuglesang, Christer and Johan Tell (2007): Människan i rymden: från Sputnik till Mars, Stockholm: Bokförlaget Max Ström.

—— (2007): 13 dygn i rymden efter 14 år på jorden: Dagbok från rymden av Christer Fuglesang, Stockholm: Albert Bonniers Förlag.

Gerovitch, Slava (2007): ”’New Soviet Man’ Inside Machine: Human Engineering, Spacecraft Design, and the Construction of Communism”, OSIRIS, 22, 135-157. [Read this article]

Gieryn, Thomas F. (1983): ”Boundary-Work and the Demarcation of Science from Non-Science: Strain and Interests in Professional Ideologies of Scientists”, American Sociological Review, 48:6, 781-795. [Read this article]

Grundmann, Reiner and Jean-Pierre Cavaillé (2000): ”Simplicity in Science and its Publics”, Scence as Culture, 9:3, 353-389. [Read this article]

Hallands Nyheter / TT (2006): ”Fuglesang kritiserar Sverige”, November 21st. Haraway, Donna J (1991): Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: the Reinvention of Nature, New York and London: Routledge.

—— (1997): Modest_Witness@Second_Millennium.FemaleMan©_Meets_Onco­Mouse™: Fem-inism and Technoscience, New York & London: Routledge.

Hilgartner, Stephen (1990): ”The Dominant View of Popularisation: Conceptual Problems, Political Uses”, Social Studies of Science: 20:3, 519-539. [Read this article]

Launius, Roger D (2005): ”Heroes in a Vacuum: the Apollo Astronaut as Cultural Icon”, 43rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit, AIAA-2005-702.

Locke, Simon (2002): ”The Public Understanding of Science – a Rhetorical Invention”, Science, Technology & Human Values, 27:1, 87-111.

Miller, Steve (2001): ”Public Understanding of Science at the Crossroads”, Public Understanding of Science, 10:1, 115-120. [Read this article]

Myers, Greg (2003): ”Discourse Studies of Scientific Popularization: Questioning the Boundares”, Discourse Studies, 5:2, 265-279.

Nye, David E (1994): American Technological Sublime, Cambridge: MIT Press.

Osborne, Jonathan, Shirley Simon and Sue Collins (2003): ”Attitudes Towards Science: A Review of the Literature and its Implications”, International Journal of Science Education, 25:9, 1049-1079. [Read this article]

Penley, Constance (1997): NASA/TREK: Popular Science and Sex in America, London & New York: Verso.

Peters, John Durham (2001): ”Witnessing”, Media, Culture & Society, 23:6, 707-723. [Read this article]

Romanyshyn, Robert D (1992): Technology as Symptom and Dream, London & New York: Routledge.

Shapin, Steven and Simon Schaffer (1985): Leviathan and the Air-pump: Hobbes, Boyle and the Experimental Life, Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Shaw, Debra Benita (2004): ”Bodies Out of This World: The Space Suit as Cultural Icon”, Science as Culture, 13:1, 123-144. [Read this article]

Sjøberg, Svein and Camilla Schreiner (2006): ”How Do Learners in Different Cultures Relate to Science and Technology? Results and Perspectives from the Project ROSE (the Relevance of Science Education)”, APFSLT: Asia-Pacific Forum on Science Learning and Teaching, 7(1).

Sturgis, Patrick and Nick Allum (2004): ”Science in Society: Re-evaluating the Deficit Model of Public Attitudes”, Public Understanding of Science, 13:1, 55-74. [Read this article]

Svenska Dagbladet (2002): ”Klartecken för förste svensken i rymden”, February 28th.

Sveriges Radio (2007): ”Sommar i P1: Christer Fuglesang”, August 12th.

SVT (1996): Percy tårar.

TV4 (2006), ”Intervju med Christer Fuglesang från rymden”, December 15th.

Wajcman, Judy (2000): ”Reflections on Gender and Technology Studies: In what State is the Art?”, Social Studies of Science, 30:3, 447-464. [Read this article]

Weitekamp, Margaret A. (2004): Right Stuff, Wrong Sex: America’s First Women in Space Program, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Wolfe, Tom (1979): The Right Stuff, New York: Bantam Books.

Wynne, Brian (1995): ”Public Understanding of Science”, Jasanoff, Sheila et al. (eds.) Handbook of Science and Technology Studies, Thousand Oaks: SAGE.

Östersundsposten / TT Spektra (2006): ”449 människor (och ett par hundar) har varit i rymden”, December 7th.

Internet-sources

The OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA): http://www.pisa.oecd.org (2007 December 20th).

The Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS): http://timss.bc.edu (2007 December 20th).

Downloads

Published

2009-06-11

How to Cite

Gunnarsson, A. (2009) “The First Swede in Space: The Making of a Public Science Hero”, Culture Unbound, 1(1), pp. 137–159. doi: 10.3384/cu.2000.1525.0919137.