Somatosphere: Science, Medicine and Anthropology


Somatosphere is a new blog focusing on medical anthropology. Eugene Raikhel, a post-doc at McGill, is the primary blogger but there is also a group of contributing anthropologists.

I met Eugene last December at the big annual anthro conference, then again when I was at McGill in July for the critical neuroscience conference. I’ve been waiting to introduce his blog since then, mostly letting him build up an impressive collection of material.

Just yesterday he posted links to some great podcasts with neuroscientists (including Michael Rutter, whom I’ve always wanted to hear) over at the Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine.

His recent Web Gleanings includes a nice round up of posts and on-line articles ranging over topics like expertise, the limitations of biological psychiatry, antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and the history of treating fatigue.

And if you’re interested in cultural competence, illness narratives, and grandma’s little drug helper, then you’ll find all that and more at Somatosphere.

Michael Wesch and You Tube

Michael Wesch, anthropologist of the digital age, delivers a lengthy lecture at the Library of Congress on the emergence of You Tube and the uses of video in an Internet age. Viral trends in video, global consumption, and the creation of meaning and connections… Lots in this talk, plus some funny clips.

We’ve featured Wesch and his videos before. He also runs a blog/video site entitled Digital Ethnography. His reflection on “context collapse” is quite interesting. Now here’s his talk.

Wednesday Round Up #25

Interactions

Madeline Drexter, How Racism Hurts – Literally
“racism literally hurts the body. More than 100 studies — most published since 2000 — now document the effects of racial discrimination on physical health”

Jamie Davies, Switching Pain Off? Coping with Pain and Pain Experience
Perception and managing pain and even a You Tube Scrubs clip – very funny

Edward Slingerland, Let’s Get Clear about Materialism
A critical take on David Brooks’ Neural Buddhism, and what materialism (e.g., grounding social and psychological phenomena in the brain) really means

P. Pascal Zachary, Digital Designers Rediscover Their Hands
Software designers get hands-on with real world objects to learn to think more creatively and intuitively

Cordelia Fine, Words that Can Change Your Mind
The transformative effects of books

Globalization, Development and Change

Matthew Trevisan, Social Networking for Social Change
Social entrepreneurs aim to bring people together to help educate and create change

Reflection Café, The UC Atlas of Global Inequality
Get your fix on online, downloadable maps on inequality worldwide. Reflection Café provides a nice introduction and overview, but if you want to go directly to mapping, by all means do so.

NextBillion.Net, The Newsroom
Check out recent articles and blog posts on enterprise and development aimed for non-established markets and for people at the bottom of the economic food chain

Continue reading “Wednesday Round Up #25”

Human evolution syllabus

I’ve been contributing too little to Neuroanthropology of late. To be honest, I’m exhausted. I’m doing a new class on human evolution and diversity for the anthropology department here at Macquarie University, and it’s kicking my posterior. I have all the usual time devouring requirements of a new class, with the added fun of 130 students, my own high expectations, and my desire to put biocultural and biological anthropology on a bit more solid footing here. I was never trained to do this — although I really enjoyed human evolution, archaeology, and biological anthropology as an undergraduate — but I really felt like it needed to be done, even if I’m not the ideal person to do it.

As recently as 2005 and 2006, a very noisy law professor here at Macquarie, Dr. Andrew Fraser, was advocating a return to the ‘White Australia’ immigration policy (see Wikipedia on him here). As Wikipedia explains (I don’t want to do the legwork on this one to give it a deeper reading): ‘In July, 2005, he received national attention in Australia by opposing non-European immigration, saying that Australia should withdraw from refugee conventions to avoid becoming “a colony of the Third World” and that African immigration increased crime rates.’ His explanation was a hodge-podge of ‘scientific racism’, discredited eugenic theory, and over-heated rhetoric. The timing was ironic; when I was trying to negotiate the terms of my contract, Macquarie was sealing off its campus because of the furor.

I felt that anthropologists needed to respond to Fraser’s ideas (as well as a lot of other things) with a serious biological anthropology unit on evolution and diversity in humanity. But our department has, of late, been offering almost entirely sociocultural anthropology, as many European and Australian departments do. And that’s how I got to offer a unit, ‘Human Evolution and Diversity,’ for Macquarie first-year students. It’s been going well, but it’s draining me.

Continue reading “Human evolution syllabus”

Grand Rounds at Six

Six until Me is hosting this week’s Grand Rounds, the carnival of medical-related blogging. This edition features a clever card catalog theme, with each card representing a theme. Topics covered include philosophy and psychology, languages, technology, and even funny stuff.

So we have maggot herders as the next big idea, dying of hunger in America (nice non sequitor, no?), dementia and brain fitness, and reflections on marriage and chronic illness.

Oldies but Goodies: Greg Downey

Well not that old, but I thought I might highlight some posts from our early days when our daily visits were pretty low. These posts deserve some attention alongside the top ten I posted on Sunday.

Today I will cover Greg’s posts. I’ve decided to split the posts into three themes: (1) work that comes out of Greg’s main research interests in perception, sport, and skilled activity; (2) his critical takes on ideas of “innateness” (whether in neuroscience or in evolutionary psychology); and (3) his anthropological examination and reflection of recent mind/brain research.

Perception and Skilled Action

Exercise is ‘mindset’ as well as activity

Brainy muscles

Tools, mirrors and the expandable body

Trust your hand, not your eyes

Children integrating their senses

Critique

Craving money, chocolate… and justice

‘Innate’ fear of snakes?

More on persuasive, irrelevant ‘neuroscience’

Anthropology and Neuroscience

Thinking about how others think: two ways?

(insert clever French grammar title here)

‘Blind to change’ or just ‘mostly blind’?

Tightening your belt on your mind