Living and working with the new medical technologies : intersections of inquiry
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Living and working with the new medical technologies : intersections of inquiry
(Cambridge studies in medical anthropology, 8)
Cambridge University Press, 2000
- : hb
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This stimulating collection of essays is the product of face-to-face dialogues among anthropologists, sociologists, and philosopher-historians, all of whom focus their attention on the newly created biomedical technologies and their application in practice. Drawing on ethnographic and historical case studies, the authors show how biomedical technologies are produced through the agencies of tools and techniques, scientists and doctors, funding bodies, patients, clients, and the public. Despite shared concerns, these essays reveal that the authors have achieved no consensus about the objectives of their research, and the deep epistemological divides clearly remain - making for provocative reading.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction Alberto Cambrosio, Allan Young and Margaret Lock
- Part I. Epochal Transitions? Biomedicine and the Transformation of Socionature: 2. Beyond nature and culture: modes of reasoning in the age of molecular biology and medicine Hans-Jorg Rheinberger
- 3. Epochs, presents, events Paul Rabinow
- Part II. Laboratories and Clinics: The Material Culture of Biomedicine: 4. Trustworthy knowledge and desperate patients: clinical tests for new drugs from cancer to AIDS Ilana Lowy
- 5. Pathology and the clinic: an ethnographic presentation of two atheroscleroses Annemarie Mol
- 6. 'Real compared to what?': diagnosing leukemias and lymphomas Peter Keating and Alberto Cambrosio
- 7. History, hystery, and psychiatric styles of reasoning Allan Young
- Part III. Technologies and Bodies: The Extended Networks of Biomedicine: 8. Screening the body: the Pap smear and the mammogram Patricia A. Kaufert
- 9. Extra chromosomes and blue tulips: medico-familial interpretations Rayna Rapp
- 10. When explanations rest: 'good-enough' brain science and the new sociomedical disorders Joseph Dumit
- 11. On dying twice: culture, technology, and the determination of death Margaret Lock
- 12. The practice of organ transplants: networks, documents, translations Veena Das.
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