Literature DB >> 12846117

Death, taxes, public opinion, and the Midas touch of Mary Tyler Moore: accounting for promises by politicians to help avert and control diabetes.

Melanie Rock1.   

Abstract

Anthropologists have begun to publish ethnographic accounts of policy-making, but few have studied medical or health matters, despite broad acceptance in anthropology that "biopower" permeates contemporary societies. This article presents some findings from an ethnographic study of how diabetes gained recognition as a pressing public health problem in Canada. It underlines the importance of statistics for constituting power within and across nation states. Statistics imbricate people and things distributed across vast distances, but they still need to be generated and invoked by individuals to engender effects--as illustrated in this article by the contributions of researchers, aboriginal leaders, and an American actress, Mary Tyler Moore--in this case, the development of Canadian government policies justified in the name of averting and controlling diabetes. To make sense of these findings, subtle differences between two concepts coined by Michel Foucault, "biopower" and "governmentality," seem significant.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12846117     DOI: 10.1525/maq.2003.17.2.200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  2 in total

1.  Care of the self and patient participation in genetic discourse: a Foucauldian reading of the surgeon general's "my family health portrait" program.

Authors:  Benjamin R Bates
Journal:  J Genet Couns       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 2.537

Review 2.  Rethinking immigrant tuberculosis control in Canada: from medical surveillance to tackling social determinants of health.

Authors:  Sylvia Reitmanova; Diana Gustafson
Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health       Date:  2012-02
  2 in total

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