Reimagining (Bio)Medicalization, Pharmaceuticals and Genetics : Old Critiques and New Engagements - Susan E. Bell

Reimagining (Bio)Medicalization, Pharmaceuticals and Genetics

Old Critiques and New Engagements

By: Susan E. Bell (Editor), Anne E. Figert (Editor)

Paperback | 10 February 2015 | Edition Number 1

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In recent years medicalization, the process of making something medical, has gained considerable ground and a position in everyday discourse. In this multidisciplinary collection of original essays, the authors expertly consider how issues around medicalization have developed, ways in which it is changing, and the potential shapes it will take in the future. They develop a unique argument that medicalization, biomedicalization, pharmaceuticalization and geneticization are related and co-evolving processes, present throughout the globe. This is an ideal addition to anthropology, sociology and STS courses about medicine and health.

Industry Reviews

Technoscience is transforming contemporary health and medicine from the inside out, producing distinctive new processes---biomedicalization, geneticization and pharmaceuticalization. This volume valuably contributes to understanding these processes transnationally in biomedicine and public health, including consequences of neoliberalism. Terrific authors and provocative commentaries make it widely accessible and useful across the social sciences.

-Adele E. Clarke, Sociology & History of Health Sciences, University of California, San Francisco

Noted medical sociologists Susan Bell and Anne Figert have compiled a series of cutting-edge chapters on the world-wide spread of medicalization, pharmaceuticals, and genetic explanations of many behaviors. Highly recommended for courses in medical sociology, medical anthropology, and science and society.

-Allan V. Horwitz, Sociology, Rutgers University

This is a timely collection of original essays in medicalization. The authors examine topics related to gender, race, and class as they intersect with technoscience and health from a global perspective. This major contribution is an essential reading for any class on health or medicine.

-Deborah M. Merrill, Sociology, Clark University

This volume provides an excellent overview of the scholarly debate on the process of medicalization and of subsequent concepts, which capture recent trends in theorizing of and developments in medicine, health care and science. The volume is very much needed reading in courses on sociology of health and medicine.

- Elianne Riska, Sociology, University of Helsinki, Finland

This lively edited collection focuses on major trends in medicine and science, illustrating how and where medical categories, pharma and genetics now organize daily life. Most importantly, it investigates the structural factors that make pharma and genetics central and offers tools to forge ahead in the critical analysis of contemporary life.

-Kelly Joyce, Director of Master's Program in Science, Technology & Society, Drexel University

This collection of highly-readable essays provides distinctly timely perspectives on medicalization and biomedicalization today. The investigation of the spheres of genetics and pharmaceuticals are worthy in their own right, and the essays here also effectively use these focal areas to address important issues of global health, environment, race, and more.

-Anne Pollock, Science, Technology, and Culture, Georgia Tech

Medicalization remains a bread-and-butter concept for medical sociology courses awakening the sociological imagination. The contributors to this volume expertly explore its limits and promises through the relationship with all things bio, pharma, or genetic.

-Stefan Timmermans, Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles

Something akin to medicalization is rapidly unfolding around the globe. Nevertheless, the framework of medicalization is not equally applicable in all cases and places. This compelling collection of essays evaluates which "ization" (e.g., medicalization, biomedicalization, pharmaceuticalization, geneticization) is the right analytic tool to account for a host of transnational cases.

-Kristin Barker, Sociology, University of New Mexico

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