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1.
Anthropol Med ; 29(2): 123-140, 2022 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34254837

RESUMO

Drawing on fieldwork with the veterinary staff at an Indian wildlife sanctuary, this paper examines the controversy surrounding an epizootic outbreak of tuberculosis among a population of sloth bears. As these bears fell ill and began to die, the veterinary staff asked whether they might be culled, inciting allegations of incompetence and cruelty from both the media and government bureaucrats. This paper works through a series of ethico-legal questions regarding the cullability of these tuberculous bears, which depended in part on how the bears were classified - as wild or domestic, captive or free, curable or incurable. As boundary-crossing figures, the bears confounded straightforward efforts at classification, rendering their fates open to debate. In treating them, the veterinary staff feared that they were only extending their suffering, producing a form of life that might be thought of as iatrogenic. In this light, this paper suggests that cruelty - both the cruelty of culling and that of treatment - might be figured as an unavoidable aspect of the relation of dependency between animals and their human caretakers.


Assuntos
Ursidae , Animais , Antropologia Médica , Humanos , Doença Iatrogênica , Índia , Política
2.
Technol Cult ; 60(4): 979-1003, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31761790

RESUMO

As drug-resistant strains of tuberculosis spread across India, commentators have warned that we are returning to the sanatorium era. Such concerns might be symptomatically read in terms of loss; however, prophecies of return might also signal that there is something to be regained. Rather than lamenting the end of the antibiotic era, I shift the focus to ask about the sanatorium, not simply as a technology of the past, but as a technology of an imminent future. In examining late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century conversations about treating tuberculosis in India, I demonstrate how the the sanatorium was figured as a therapeutic technology that mediated the relationship between the body and its colonial milieu. In this light, I argue that contemporary prophecies of a future past register not simply the loss of antibiotic efficacy, but also a desire to return to a therapeutics that foregrounds issues of vitality, mediation, and environment.


Assuntos
Hospitais de Doenças Crônicas/história , Tuberculose/história , Vitalismo/história , Colonialismo/história , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Índia , Tuberculose/terapia
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