"Synthesizing Hope opens up a fascinating landscape of the challenges and possibilities of postcolonial science. Using iThemba Pharmaceuticals as her research site, Pollock opens up postcolonial knowledge construction in brilliant detail to reveal the myriad layers of power, capital, and global politics that shape the making of modern science. This is a sobering tale of ambition and failure, of faith and despair, reminding us that the histories of colonial science continue to haunt the future hope of lives in the Global South."
— Banu Subramaniam, University of Massachusetts Amherst
"This book shows us how pharmaceutical science both derives from and drives different forms of political, biomedical, and affective power. Moving seamlessly from molecules to macro-structures, the text troubles the distinction between economic and emotional investment in science. Pollock reveals how ‘hope’ is more than a feeling, but a practice that is synthesized in relation to scientific disciplines. It's a necessary read for everyone who cares about the future of global health and democratization of knowledge."
— Ruha Benjamin, Princeton University
"The empirical basis of the monograph is rich and detailed ethnographic research. . . . Of particular interest to anyone with an interest in pharmaceutical knowledge making in South Africa specifically, but more generally it should appeal to anyone with an interest in novel ways to organise drug discovery for neglected diseases in the Global South, the problematisation of dichotomies between Global North and Global South in global health discourses which perpetuate inequalities, and the ties between pharmaceutical knowledge making and infrastructure including how materiality and place matter."
— Sociology of Health & Illness
"It fills a gap in the anthropology of pharmaceuticals . . . . It is rare for science and technology studies scholars to conduct research in laboratories in the Global South; it is also rare for them to do long-term fieldwork. Pollock shows what can be gained from following the life and death of a research company over time, situating it both locally and in the webs of global and local research connections. Synthesizing Hope presents fascinating insights on how a company called iThemba Pharmaceuticals was set up on the outskirts of Johannesburg. . . . The post-apartheid context, the vivid descriptions of laboratory life, and the incisive analysis of the context in which the laboratory emerges makes Synthesizing Hope a compelling case study of postcolonial science."
— Medical Anthropology Quarterly
"A particular strength of the book is its use of a particular global South example to show the benefits and drawbacks of an effort to enable in-country scientists to develop new drugs appropriate to local needs. . . . In its problematisation of dominant geographic and sociological understandings of scientific knowledge production, the book makes an important contribution to science and technology studies and critical global health studies."
— Medical History
"In this concise and accessible volume, Pollock considers the familiar territory of the material and social history of pharmaceutical development in an unfamiliar place: a South African startup, iThemba Pharmaceuticals. And, as the reader learns over the course of six chapters, place matters. Though iThemba ultimately folded, Pollock shows how situating the production of scientific knowledge within South Africa opened up new forms of hope and postcolonial world-making. . . . Historians of medicine, chemistry, and pharmaceuticals will find much of interest. . . . Global health and STS scholars will likewise find Pollock's reframing of postcolonial science and biomedical power relations refreshing and informative."
— Social History of Alcohol and Drugs
"A fantastic introduction into the stakes of technoscience in societies in transformation. I highly recommend it for scholars of science and technology studies, students interested in global health geographies and everybody with an interest in science in the Global South."
— Connections: A Journal for Historians and Area Specialists