Description
This course will introduce you to key concepts and debates in the anthropology of medicine and global health, and aims to develop critical thinking informed by anthropological analyses and methods.
We will consider questions such as:
- What does it mean to be ill and healthy in different societies?
- How do concepts of the body, sickness and health in different cultures influence health behaviour?
- How can we document and explain the political and economic determinants of health and illness through ethnography?
- How can anthropology inform global health policy and programmes?
At the end of this course students will be able to:
- Critically analyse global health problems and circumstances using anthropological concepts and methods
- Employ ethnographic evidence to support or challenge key arguments in global health
The module is open to students on the MSc/PG Dip and iBSc Global Health and Development.
You will be taught in interactive lectures and seminars. Moodle will be used as an information portal and a source for reading materials. You are expected to complete the required reading, listening or viewing assigned for each week and to participate in discussions that take place in lectures and small groups.
Selected reading list:
- Good BJ (Ed.), Fischer MJM (Ed.), Willen SE (Ed.), DelVecchio Good M-J (Ed.). (2010) , Emergent Realities. Wiley-Blackwell
- Singer M & Erickson PI. (2011). Blackwell
- Biehl J and Petryna A. (2013) Princeton University Press
- Hahn, R, & Inhorn, M. (2009) . Oxford. Oxford University Press.
- Lock, M. & Nguyen, V.K. (2010) . University of California Press.
Module deliveries for 2024/25 academic year
Last updated
This module description was last updated on 19th August 2024.
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