Literature DB >> 19449709

Health identities and subjectivities: the ethnographic challenge.

Susan Reynolds Whyte1.   

Abstract

The formation of identity and subjectivity in relation to health is a fundamental issue in social science. This overview distinguishes two different approaches to the workings of power in shaping senses of self and other. Politics of identity scholars focus on social movements and organizations concerned with discrimination, recognition, and social justice. The biopower approach examines discourse and technology as they influence subjectivity and new forms of sociality. Recent work in medical anthropology, especially on chronic problems, illustrates the two approaches and also points to the significance of detailed comparative ethnography for problematizing them. By analyzing the political and economic bases of health, and by embedding health conditions in the other concerns of daily life, comparative ethnography ensures differentiation and nuance. It helps us to grasp the uneven effects of social conditions on the possibilities for the formation of health identities and subjectivities.

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19449709     DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1387.2009.01034.x

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


  10 in total

1.  Peace in the Clinic: Rethinking "Global Health Diplomacy" in the Somali Region of Ethiopia.

Authors:  Lauren Carruth
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2016-06

2.  Exposure and exclusion: disenfranchised biological citizenship among the first-generation Korean Americans.

Authors:  Taewoo Kim; Charlotte Haney; Janis Faye Hutchinson
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2012-12

3.  To wish you well: the biopolitical subjectivities of medical crowdfunders during and after Aotearoa New Zealand's COVID-19 lockdown.

Authors:  Susan Wardell
Journal:  Biosocieties       Date:  2021-09-22

4.  BRCA patients in Cuba, Greece and Germany: Comparative perspectives on public health, the state and the partial reproduction of 'neoliberal' subjects.

Authors:  Sahra Gibbon; Eirini Kampriani; Andrea Zur Nieden
Journal:  Biosocieties       Date:  2010-11-22

5.  "Trying" times: Medicalization, intent, and ambiguity in the definition of infertility.

Authors:  Arthur L Greil; Julia McQuillan
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2010-06

6.  Albinism, stigma, subjectivity and global-local discourses in Tanzania.

Authors:  Giorgio Brocco
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2016-06-29

7.  "I don't know how I'm still standing" a Bakhtinian analysis of social housing and health narratives in East London.

Authors:  C Thompson; D J Lewis; T Greenhalgh; N R Smith; A E Fahy; S Cummins
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2017-01-25       Impact factor: 4.634

8.  Introduction: public health genomics-anthropological interventions in the quest for molecular medicine.

Authors:  Karen-Sue Taussig; Sahra Elizabeth Gibbon
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2013-11-08

9.  'Transport to Where?': Reflections on the problem of value and time à propos an awkward practice in medical research.

Authors:  P Wenzel Geissler
Journal:  J Cult Econ       Date:  2011-02

10.  Medical technologies: flows, frictions and new socialities.

Authors:  Anita Hardon; Eileen Moyer
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2014
  10 in total

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