1st Edition

Posthumanism and Public Health

Edited By Simon Cohn, Rebecca Lynch Copyright 2018
    122 Pages
    by Routledge

    122 Pages
    by Routledge

    The intellectual and moral imperatives that underscore public health have sustained the idea that its fundamental scope is the study of human health, illness and suffering, and that these are self-evidently attributable to individuals and groups of people. This edited collection explores to what extent a shift towards more posthuman perspectives – where the status of the human as the obvious focus for our attention is de-stabilised – might catalyse complimentary or alternative accounts of common topics in public health. The collection argues that through this posthuman approach, standard categories such as health, illness and even the body might be re-conceived as interactions between different entities – between people, other living things, material objects and the environment – rather than as inherently human properties.

    By taking into greater account non-humans and relationships between humans and non-humans, this approach offers a re-casting of traditional topics in public health and opens new opportunities for examining these. In so doing, the book raises key questions about researching ‘health’; about considering the extent to which it may be productive to think about health as it interests not only human lives; and what happens to our moral and ethical commitments if we no longer put humans first. This book was originally published as a special issue of Critical Public Health.

    Introduction – Posthuman perspectives: relevance for a global public health Simon Cohn and Rebecca Lynch

    1. On difference and doubt as tools for critical engagement with public health Catherine M. Will

    2. Posthumanist critique and human health: how nonhumans (could) figure in public health research Carrie Friese and Nathalie Nuyts

    3. Who or what is ‘the public’ in critical public health? Reflections on posthumanism and anthropological engagements with One Health Melanie J. Rock

    4. Enacting toxicity: epidemiology and the study of air pollution for public health Emma Garnett

    5. The injecting ‘event’: harm reduction beyond the human Fay Dennis

    6. Biopolitical precarity in the permeable body: the social lives of people, viruses and their medicines Elizabeth Mills

    7. Beyond the person: the construction and transformation of blood as a resource Rebecca Lynch and Simon Cohn

    8. Technologies of the self in public health: insights from public deliberations on cognitive and behavioural enhancement P. Lehoux, B. Williams-Jones, D. Grimard and S. Proulx

    9. Commentary: Pigs in public health Mette N. Svendsen

    Biography

    Simon Cohn is Professor in Medical Anthropology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK. Drawing increasingly on science studies and practice theory, his research has focused on issues related to diagnosis, contested conditions and chronic illness in the UK and other high-income societies.

    Rebecca Lynch is a Research Fellow in Medical Anthropology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK. Her research is interested in constructions of the body, health and illness particularly in relation to morality, values and categorisation. She has undertaken ethnographic fieldwork in Trinidad and research projects in the UK.