AGEM
Willkommen bei der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Ethnologie und Medizin (AGEM)
Die AGEM ist ein 1970 gegründeter gemeinnütziger Verein mit dem Ziel, die Zusammenarbeit zwischen der Medizin, den angrenzenden Naturwissenschaften und den Kultur‑, Geistes- und Sozialwissenschaften zu fördern und dadurch das Studium des interdisziplinären Arbeitsfelds Ethnologie und Medizin zu intensivieren.
Was wir tun
- Herausgabe der Zeitschrift Curare
- Durchführung von Tagungen
- Dokumentation von Literatur und Informationen
Curare
Zeitschrift für Medizinethnologie
Veranstaltungen
Birth Rites Collection Summer School 2025
Workshop
University of Kent, UK and online
Birth Rites Collection Summer School
Birth Rites Collection Summer School 2025
The Summer School is a unique programme of lectures, workshops, seminars and one-to-one tutorials around the Birth Rites Collection, the world’s first and only contemporary art collection dedicated to the subject of childbirth.This intensive programme will introduce you to the collection and facilitate a dialogue between you, your practice, this year’s themes and the artworks.
The course is led by artist and BRC Curator, Helen Knowles and artist Dr. Leni Dothan, with guest lectures from leading artists in the field. The course will empower you to articulate your own practice and responses to the collection in a supportive environment whilst exploring critical perspectives in the field of birth.
Midwives, academics, curators, artists, medics, health professionals, art historians, policy advisors and the general public, who are interested in childbirth through the lens of art, are all welcome. As a participant, you will enter the course with your own skill set and finish, with bespoke visual, filmic and/or performative material, to be used thereafter in your own future work.
Workshops include exploring the ethical, political and visual discourses of birth via text, film, and performance. Additionally, this year, we present a unique opportunity to engage with a curated selection of works from the collection that are not ordinarily accessible to the public.
Themes include:
– Navigating mortality—from preterm birth to post-partum
– Artistic responses to preterm birth.
– How the collection informs and unpacks different perspectives in midwifery, medicine and education, and its potential to improve practice and policy.
– The Collection’s impact on feminist art practices and the rehabilitation of visual discourses of birth into art history.
– Censorship of artworks on birth, institutional responses, ethics and the law
Speakers include: Griselda Pollock (online keynote), Anna Perach, Hannah Conway, Courtney Conrad, Catherine Williamson, Andrea Khora, Helen Knowles and Leni Dothan, with more announced soon.
We offer two modalities for this course: one in person, as an intensive four-day program at the University of Kent, and one weekly online course over four weeks, that participants can join from anywhere in the world.
Four-day course (in-person):
Dates: July 7–10, 10–5pm BST (with some late evenings)
Location: University of Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom
Cost: £650 per person / £500 concession (for practicing artists, students, and those with a low income).
Capacity: 15 places per course
Accommodation: On-campus accommodation is available at an additional cost.
Four-week course (online):
Dates: Wednesdays, June 11– July 2, 7–9:30pm BST and Saturday, June 28, 2–5pm BST.
All lectures, workshops, and discussions will take place online.
Cost: £550 per person / £400 concession.
A £100 deposit is required to secure a place for either course.
To book your place visit: https://www.birthritescollection.org.uk/summer-school
Birth Rites Collection’s Summer School
Konferenz
Online & in Person Summer School University of Kent, UK (June & July 2025)
Birth Rites Collection’s Summer School is a unique programme of lectures, workshops, seminars and one-to-one tutorials. This intensive programme will introduce you to the collection and facilitate a dialogue between you, your practice, this year’s themes, and the artworks. The Birth Rites Collection Summer School is led by artist and BRC Curator Helen Knowles and artist Dr. Leni Dothan. The course will empower you to articulate your own practice and responses to the collection in a supportive environment whilst exploring critical perspectives in the field of birth.
BRC_SUMMERSCHOOL_2025_withlinks
More Info and booking: https://www.birthritescollection.org.uk/summer-school
Ethnographies of expert knowledges in mental health, neurodivergence, and disability
Panel
CfP for a Conference on Ethnography and Qualitative Research in Trento (Italy)
CfP „Ethnographies of expert knowledges in mental health, neurodivergence, and disability”
10th International Conference on Ethnography and Qualitative Research Trento, Italy
July 10 to 12, 2025
Deadline: 20 January
„Ethnographies of expert knowledges in mental health, neurodivergence, and disability”
Nowadays, there has been a «discursive explosion» surrounding mental health, disability, and neurodivergence resulting in a wide array of heterogeneous narratives and representations in public and academic debates. Particularly on digital platforms, we witness a rise in content focused on «positivity» and the reversal of stigma. These can certainly be seen as an incursion into the political sphere by mad/crip activism; however, it is important to recognize how (part of) these discourses could be absorbed into a neoliberal framework. In a context of performative and extractivist logic, mad/crip/neurodivergent positivity risks becoming yet another tool that decrees the «salvation» of those with the resources to fit into the framework of «diversity» valorisation, while leading to processes of «monstrification» towards those who deviate from this construction of subjectivity.
Central in operating this differentiation is the role of expert knowledge. Although mental health, disability, and neurodivergence remain still framed within a predominantly biomedical paradigm, a range of technical figures are intervening in the construction of categories and the «take charge of users». An archipelago of expert knowledges – social workers, legal actors, tutors, educational services, (former) patients who take on roles as «expert users», NGO volunteers – thus intervene in identity and relational constructions, defining life trajectories, producing spaces and services that inherently navigate the constitutive ambiguity between care and control, treatment and neglect. Among these are the social sciences, both in their production of knowledge and in providing tools for social care practices. They contribute to defining, identifying, classifying, and quantifying the users, positioning them within the grids of «deserving/appropriate» vs «irrecoverable» patient, «rehabilitable» vs excluded.
The current configuration, resulting from the dismantling of national social protection systems in the wake of austerity policies and the shift of responsibility to the private sector, represents only the latest phase in a long-standing process of differential inclusion and exclusion, deeply embedded in the very structure of social welfare and the State itself.
Ethnographic practice highlights power structures, fostering critical reflection on the role of social work and expert knowledges. This approach challenges established institutions and models while also situating the processes surrounding care and treatment within relationships, contexts, and everyday tactics.
We invite contributions that address mental health, disability, and neurodivergence, within and beyond the care/control binary. We ask what is the role of «expert knowledges» – considered in their singularity or intersections – in the construction of subjectivities, in the production of vulnerability, and in the processes of distinction and fragmentation of the user base; and how practices of subtraction or resistance to such devices configure.
Open questions
– What processes shape the construction of meaning around the categories of vulnerability and fragility (across disability, neurodivergence, and mental health), and how do these categories influence social work in taking charge and managing users?
– How can an ethnographic critique of concepts such as paternalism and pietism in social welfare be framed, starting from practices of care, control, neglect, and treatment?
– How do practices of distinction within social services (broadly defined) emerge between the «deserving» user and the «problematic» user, and how do these distinctions—simultaneously practical, organizational, and moral—affect the balance between care and control?
– How does the relationship between families, public services, and caregivers configure the everyday dynamics of care and control within a context of poly-crisis and dismantling the welfare state? How do the «third sector», humanitarian organizations, and volunteering intersect
in this relationship?
– How do mad/crip/neurodivergent subjectivation processes unfold, both within and beyond medicalization and the framing of service users?
– What impact do social inequalities—based on structural axes of class, race, gender, sexualities, and others—have on the rationale of social services? How do these processes influence street-level bureaucracy practices, and how do they shape subjectivation within these systems?
– What forms of withdrawal and detachment from the controlling dimensions of social and clinical work exist, and what possibilities do they open up?
– What are the processes of spatialization of disability/neurodivergence/mental health, and how do they relate to social and clinical work? What are the geographies of these processes, and what do they add to our understanding?