STS.330J / 21A.830J History and Anthropology of Medicine and Biology, Spring 2009
Author(s)
Jones, David; Helmreich, Stefan
Downloadsts-330j-spring-2009/contents/index.htm (35.35Kb)
Alternative title
History and Anthropology of Medicine and Biology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This course explores recent historical and anthropological approaches to the study of life, in both medicine and biology. After grounding our conversation in accounts of natural history and medicine that predate the rise of biology as a discipline, we explore modes of theorizing historical and contemporary bioscience. Drawing on the work of historian William Coleman, we examine the forms, functions, and transformations of biological and medical objects of study. Along the way we treat the history of heredity, molecular biology, race, medicine in the colonies and the metropole, and bioeconomic exchange. We read anthropological literature on old and new forms of biopower, at scales from the molecular to the organismic to the global. The course includes readings from the HASTS Common Exam List. The aim of this seminar is to train students to be participants in scholarly debates in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences about the nature of life, the body, and biomedicine.
Date issued
2009-06Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Program in Science, Technology and Society; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Anthropology ProgramOther identifiers
STS.330J-Spring2009
local: STS.330J
local: 21A.830J
local: IMSCP-MD5-4f3e34e01166a164b846a83d3bc6c1e1
Keywords
historical medicine, medieval dissection, gender, visible human project, genealogies, genome, biological kinship, biology of race, race and disease, emerging diseases, human relationship with animals, reproductive technologies, therapeutics, bioprospecting, climate change, environmental technology