New Critical Care essay on Russia's war in Ukraine: commentary by Kateryna Dovhopola, Olha Nabochenko, and Tetiana Kostenko is essential reading for understanding effects of the war on Ukrainian children with disabilities. #anthrotwittermedanthroquarterly.org/criti…
Stay tuned for more essays by @dafnarachok, @ShmatkoIvan, Volha Verbilovich, Alyona Mazhnaya, Kateryna Dovhopola, Olha Nabochenko, and Tetiana M. Kostenko.
Janelle S. Taylor’s highly cited article “On Recognition, Caring, and Dementia,” published in 2008 in Medical Anthropology Quarterly, has been adapted into a story that aired today on @ThisAmerLife, Ep. #823: “The Question Trap.” Listen here: thisamericanlife.org/823/the…
"How’s your mom?" Janelle Taylor thinks through why people keep asking if her mother recognizes her, when that's totally beside the point. bit.ly/3Ovgyz0
Check out the latest Critical Care blog post by @NeilKAggarwal, analyzing the discursive uses of psychiatric knowledge in the medical evaluation of former PM of Pakistan Imran Khan. medanthroquarterly.org/criti…
MAQ is looking for a new editor for its online Reading the Archive Series, our dynamic virtual issue space. Check out the series here and watch your inboxes and our website for a full advert. Email Alex Nading, MAQ Editor, if interested. medanthroquarterly.org/teach…
"An important contribution to the anthropological literature on China and to studies of Chinese STS" —Can Science and Technology Save China? ed. by Susan Greenhalgh & Li Zhang @CornellPress
Reviewed by Jennifer A. Liu
medanthroquarterly.org/archi…
Growing Old in a New China by Rose Keimig looks into "how and why we care for older adults and the ways in which that matters in people’s lives and in the life of a society." @RutgersUPress
Reviewed by Jeanne Laraine Shea
medanthroquarterly.org/archi…
.@anthro919's "Weighing the Future" is "a sophisticated and eloquent book about the politics of postgenomic reproduction in prenatal trials." Reviewed by @megan_warin. @ucpressmedanthroquarterly.org/archi…
"Rabies in the Streets" by @NadalDeborah is "a truly multi-species ethnography" that offers a fascinating look at “rabies as a social being.” Reviewed by Harlan Weaver. medanthroquarterly.org/archi…