December 13, 2002 - Trauma, Culture and the Brain Conference: As a critical medical anthropologist Brazil RPCV Nancy Scheper-Hughes researched and written extensively on Ireland, Brazil and South Africa.

Peace Corps Online: Directory: Brazil: Peace Corps Brazil: The Peace Corps in Brazil: December 13, 2002 - Trauma, Culture and the Brain Conference: As a critical medical anthropologist Brazil RPCV Nancy Scheper-Hughes researched and written extensively on Ireland, Brazil and South Africa.

By Admin1 (admin) (pool-151-196-178-137.balt.east.verizon.net - 151.196.178.137) on Thursday, April 01, 2004 - 5:22 pm: Edit Post

As a critical medical anthropologist Brazil RPCV Nancy Scheper-Hughes researched and written extensively on Ireland, Brazil and South Africa.

As a critical medical anthropologist Brazil RPCV Nancy Scheper-Hughes researched and written extensively on Ireland, Brazil and South Africa.

As a critical medical anthropologist Brazil RPCV Nancy Scheper-Hughes researched and written extensively on Ireland, Brazil and South Africa.

Nancy Scheper-Hughes, PhD

As a critical medical anthropologist Nancy Scheper-Hughes researched and written extensively on Ireland, Brazil and South Africa. In particular, she is concerned with the violence of everyday life from an existentialist, feminist, and politically engaged perspective.

Her first anthropological study in County Kerry, rural Ireland (to which she returned in 1999) concerned the social and cultural dimensions of mental illness among bachelor farmers in rural Ireland. Later in Boston she undertook a study of the deinstitutionalization of those with severe mental ill-health. Between 1982-1990 Scheper-Hughes conducted extensive field research in the shantytowns of Northeast Brazil on infant mortality, the 'madness of hunger,' the medicalization of social and political trauma, and the experience of motherhood, deprivation, and moral thinking and practice. She has also researched and published on AIDS, the social body, and sexual citizenship in Cuba and Brazil, and on the role of violence, 'truth" and reconciliation' during the transition to democracy in South Africa.

Most recently, she has written on subjects ranging from the cultural politics of international adoption, Munchausen-by-Proxy as a weapon the weak, to the execution of Brazilian street children, the global traffic in human organs and the use of living unrelated donors in human transplant surgery as a form of sacrificial violence. Scheper-Hughes's examination of structural, "everyday", and political violence has encouraged her to develop a unique style of critical theory and reflexive ethnography, which has been broadly applied to medicine, psychiatry, and to the practice of anthropology. In 1999 she founded, with Prof. Lawrence Cohen, Organs Watch, a programme created to investigate human rights violations in the harvesting, sale, and distribution of human organs and tissues.




Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.

Story Source: Trauma, Culture and the Brain Conference

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Brazil; Anthropology; Medical Antrhpology

PCOL10257
33

.


Add a Message


This is a public posting area. Enter your username and password if you have an account. Otherwise, enter your full name as your username and leave the password blank. Your e-mail address is optional.
Username:  
Password:
E-mail: