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
Läuft. Die Ausstellung zur Menstruation
Ausstellung
Ausstellung im Museum Europäischer Kulturen (Berlin)
„Läuft. Die Ausstellung zur Menstruation“
06.10.2023 bis 06.10.2024
Museum Europäischer Kulturen – Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
Etwa 2 Milliarden Menschen auf der Welt menstruieren. Über 1,5 Milliarden weitere Menschen hatten ihre Periode oder werden sie bekommen. Seit rund 10 Jahren nun wird die Menstruation in Europa öffentlich diskutiert. Das MEK präsentiert die Ausstellung dazu.
„Läuft“ zeigt eine Geschichte des Pragmatismus und der Utopien, des Erfindungsreichtums und Aktivismus. Dafür versammelt die Ausstellung rund 100 historische und brandneue Menstruationsartikel sowie Werbeanzeigen. Schaubilder, Interviews und Hands-On-Stationen vermitteln den aktuellen Wissensstand. Mit knapp 200 Alltagsgegenständen, Fotos, Grafiken, Zeitungsartikeln und Social-Media-Posts fächert die Ausstellung die Diskurse auf, die Menstruierende seit Jahrzehnten begleiten: Es geht um Themen wie Leistung, Periodenarmut, Müll, „Normalität“, Naturverbundenheit, Stimmung und einige mehr – und natürlich um Aktivismus! Denn im Zentrum stehen die Stimmen und Erfahrungen von Menstruierenden selbst. Wir laden dazu ein, ihnen in Interviews zu lauschen und sich selbst auszutauschen. Filmausschnitte, Musik und Kunstwerke runden die Ausstellung ab.
Mehr Infos unter http://www.smb.museum/flow.
Francesca Vaghi: “Anything that we can do to help, it’s got to be good”: the everyday pragmatism of NHS charities
Vortrag
Hybrid event/Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health ad hoc seminar
Francesca Vaghi: “Anything that we can do to help, it’s got to be good”: the everyday pragmatism of NHS charities
Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health ad hoc seminar
Tuesday 29th October 2025, 3–4:30pm (online and in-person in the Centre’s boardroom in Queen’s Building, Streatham Campus, University of Exeter).
Crisis no longer seems to represent a momentary state of emergency, but rather an ongoing situation that is continually defining our present. After over a decade of austerity measures in the UK, which have led to cuts in the public sector and rising poverty rates, NHS and other charities have expanded. Examining the work of these organisations offers an interesting example of how the ‘mixed economy of welfare’ works in practice, and how a historically blurry line within the NHS – between what should be state-funded, or simply an ‘add-on’ that can be provided via charitable or voluntary means – is thought of and navigated by different people, at a time of extended crisis. Drawing from an ethnographic case-study in an English city and with an NHS charity, this talk explores the role of the charity in supplementing healthcare while also fulfilling the role of a welfare service. I introduce the idea of everyday pragmatism to explain people’s motivations to work, volunteer, and fundraise for the NHS, informed by Cooper’s work on ‘everyday utopias’ (2014), and ‘prefiguration’ (2016; 2020), and Berlant’s Cruel Optimism (2011). In doing so, I aim to call attention to people actively doing what they can to improve the present moment through day-to-day practices, while imagining, demanding, and waiting for a better future. As opposed to viewing participants as passively accepting, or defeated by, the current situation, everyday pragmatism rather seeks to illuminate how people negotiate ambivalence in an active and participatory manner.
BIO:
Francesca Vaghi is Research Associate at the School of Social & Political Science, University of Glasgow. Working with Professor Ellen Stewart, she conducts research on the work of contemporary NHS charities as part of the Border Crossings project: https://more.bham.ac.uk/border-crossings/border-crossings/projects/ . Francesca completed her PhD in Anthropology at SOAS, University of London, in 2019. This investigated how children create self and peer identities through food and eating practices, how children’s food policy fits into family intervention policies in the context of Britain’s mixed economy of welfare, and how notions of ‘good food’ and ‘good parenting’ (particularly mothering) are interlinked. Her thesis is the basis for her recent (2023) monograph, Food Policy and Practice in Early Childhood Education and Care: Children, Practitioners, and Parents in an English Nursery.
Link to book into the event here: “Anything that we can do to help, it’s got to be good”
Tickets, Tue, Oct 29, 2024 at 3:00 PM | Eventbrite
Theorizing through the mundane: storying transformations in healthcare
Workshop
Academic paper workshop
Academic paper workshop and special issue on „Theorizing through the mundane: storying transformations in healthcare”
Department of Sociology, University of Zurich, Switzerland.
04–06.06.2025
Deadline: 01.12 2024
Details:
As a ‘big story’ concern, transformations in healthcare abound: digitalization and the introduction of AI, major demographic transformations, antimicrobial resistances, soaring healthcare staff shortages, the emergence of transgender care, the ‘crisis’ of maternity and neonatal care, and ever increasing health inequalities are just a few of them. This workshop and special issue respond to such ‘big story’ concerns in healthcare by theorizing through ‘the mundane’.
STS has a long tradition – with different beginnings – of attending to and theorizing through ‘the mundane’. Think about for example the mundaneness of infrastructural work (Bowker and Star 1999), the fleetingly subtle ‘here-and-now’ (Verran 1999), the everydayness of marginalizing ‘invisible work’ (Star/Strauss 1989) and Latour’s doorstopper (Johnson/Latour 1988). More recently, it has been central to ‘care studies’ and ‘maintenance and repair studies’ marked through an attention to ‘daily life matters’
and ‘tinkering’ (Mol et al. 2010), ‘exnovation’ (Mesman 2008), ‘everyday ethics’ (Pols 2023), the easily devalued as ethico-political commitment (Puig de la Bellacasa 2011), and overlooked situations that take place in interstices of routine and breakdown (Denis et al. 2015).
In this workshop and special issue, we are drawing upon and extending these rich STS accounts on ‘the mundane’ to empirically investigate, think about and experiment with how STS scholars can relate to and intervene in ‘transformations’ in healthcare. After, or in addition to, the analytical sensitivities and concerns that have been developed in the care debate (Lindén and Lydahl 2021; Mol, Moser, Pols 2021; Martin, Myers, Viseu 2015; Puig de la Bellacasa 2011) and the field of valuation studies (Dussauge, Helgesson, Lee 2015), which have dominated research on healthcare in STS over the past decade, the special issue seeks to – empirically, analytically, and politically – take the next step. ‘Theorising through the mundane’ offers a version of STS that stays responsive to the ways we are living, dying and caring for bodies and diseases, and their transformations, in the first half of the 21st century; it offers an STS that transforms with and through these ways now, here, and in the future.
The workshop and special issue welcomes papers with an empirical focus on healthcare in the large sense. The contributions will explore questions such as:
– What counts as ‘mundane’ in particular situations, sites, practices of healthcare?
– How does an attention to ‘the mundane’ allow us to transform ‘big stories’ about current transformations in healthcare?
– How does ‘the mundane’ allow us to attend to modes of living and dying well?
– How to stay attentive to asymmetrical configurations and the non-innocence of ‘the mundane’?
– How does the lens of the mundane transform and extend STS theorizing?
The workshop will take place from the 4th to the 6th June 2025 at the Department of Sociology, University of Zurich. Participants need to submit a paper draft beforehand, which will be discussed during the workshop. On the third day, we will engage in
alternative formats (walking, writing, etc.) to think through the mundane.
The special issue will be based on the workshop and submitted to a major STS journal (currently envisaged S&TS).
If this speaks to you and you are interested in submitting a contribution to the workshop and special issue or only to the special issue, please send an abstract of no more than 250 words before the 1st December 2024 to: theorising_through_the_mundane@etik.com
If you have further questions, do not hesitate to contact us. We are looking forward to receiving your contribution.
Timeline:
2024 December 1: Open call for contributions closes
2024 December 31: Decisions of editors on who will participate in workshop and/or SI & communication of decision to applicants
2025 Beginning May: Submission of paper draft for workshop
2025 June 4–6: Workshop in Zurich (day 1 & 2 for discussion of paper drafts, day 3 with alternative formats for thinking through the mundane)
2025 September 30: Submission paper to a major STS journal (currently envisaged: S&TS)