Ethnographies and Health, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
Reflections on Empirical and Methodological Entanglements

Coordinators: Garnett Emma, Reynolds Joanna, Milton Sarah

Language: English

Approximative price 158.24 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Ethnographies and Health
Publication date:
Support: Print on demand

Approximative price 158.24 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Ethnographies and Health
Publication date:
Support: Print on demand
This edited collection explores the multiple ways in which ethnography and health emerge and take form through the research process. There is now a plethora of disciplinary engagements with ethnography around the topic of health, including anthropology, sociology, geography, science and technology studies, and in health care professions such as nursing and occupational therapy. This dynamic and evolving landscape means ethnography and health are entangled in new and different ways, providing a timely opportunity to explore what these entanglements do and affect in the social production of knowledge. Rather than discussing the strengths (and limitations) of ethnography for engaging with health, the book asks: what does ethnography enable, make visible and possible for knowing and doing health in contemporary research settings and beyond?
1. Introduction: Entangling Ethnography and Health.- 2. Working through Ethical and Emotional Concerns and Uncertainties in Ethnographic Research with People with Learning Disabilities.- 3. Virtual Ethnography of HIV Positive Health Status in Gay Virtual Intimacies in Serbia.- 4. Ethnography and Ethics in Your Own Workplace: Reconceptualising Dialysis Care from an Insider Nurse Researcher.- 5. Using an Ethnographic Approach to Study End-of-Life Care: Reflections from Research Encounters in England.- 6. An Occupational Therapist Ethnographer on an Acute Medical Unit: Using Reflexivity to Understand Situational Identity and the Weight of Expectation.- 7. Shaping the Field: A Reflexive Account of Practitioner Interference during Ethnographic Fieldwork in Radiotherapy.- 8. Symbolic, Collective and Intimate Spaces: An Ethnographic Approach to the Places of Integrated Care.- 9. Temporality and the Intersections between Ageing, Gender and Wellness: Reflections from an Ethnographic Study in Salsa Classes.- 10. Caring with Others: Constructing a Good Life with Incurable Illness.- 11. “What Sort of Jumper Is That, Your Wife Has Terrible Taste Mate.” Exploring the Importance of Positionality within Ethnographic Research Conducted alongside a Public Health Programme in Three Scottish Prisons.- 12. Ethnographic Encounters with the ‘Community’: Implications for Considering Scale in Public Health Evaluation.- 13. “To Uninstall Oneself”: Ethnographizing Immunostimulants for Autoimmunity in Brazil.- 14. Knowledge Infrastructures of Air Pollution: Tracing the In-Between Spaces of Interdisciplinary Science in Action.- 15. Towards a Pragmatics of Health.
Emma Garnett is a Research Fellow at the School of Population Health & Environmental Sciences at King’s College London, UK. Her ethnographic work has explored the socio-material practices of research in environmental health science and citizen science. She has published on interdisciplinarity, big data and post-humanist approaches to global health.

Joanna Reynolds is an Assistant Professor in Social Science at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK, and an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Sheffield, UK.  She has a background in social anthropology and public health, and her current research interests include health inequalities, the making of public health knowledge through evaluation, and the fringes of ‘health’ and its intersections with other domains of policy and decision making.  

Sarah Milton is a Research Fellow in Medical Anthropology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK. Her interests are in ageing, gender and local practices of public health in the UK. She has published on later life sexualities, and ageing, wellbeing and welfare in the context of austerity.

Offers original contributions to knowledge on ethnography as a research method

Spans disciplines and compliments the literature on more positivist methods of health research

Highlights the possible transformative effects of using ethnography to inform policy and practice