Doucet-Battle, James (Author)
A bold new indictment of the racialization of science Decades of data cannot be ignored: African American adults are far more likely to develop Type 2 diabetes than white adults. But has science gone so far in racializing diabetes as to undermine the search for solutions? In a rousing indictment of the idea that notions of biological race should drive scientific inquiry, Sweetness in the Blood provides an ethnographic picture of biotechnology’s framings of Type 2 diabetes risk and race and, importantly, offers a critical examination of the assumptions behind the recruitment of African American and African-descent populations for Type 2 diabetes research.James Doucet-Battle begins with a historical overview of how diabetes has been researched and framed racially over the past century, chronicling one company’s efforts to recruit African Americans to test their new diabetes risk-score algorithm with the aim of increasing the clinical and market value of the firm’s technology. He considers African American reticence about participation in biomedical research and examines race and health disparities in light of advances in genomic sequencing technology. Doucet-Battle concludes by emphasizing that genomic research into sub-Saharan ancestry in fact underlines the importance of analyzing gender before attempting to understand the notion of race. No disease reveals this more than Type 2 diabetes.Sweetness in the Blood challenges the notion that the best approach to understanding, managing, and curing Type 2 diabetes is through the lens of race. It also transforms how we think about sugar, filling a neglected gap between the sugar- and molasses-sweetened past of the enslaved African laborer and the high-fructose corn syrup- and corporate-fed body of the contemporary consumer-laborer.
...MoreReview Arleen Tuchman (2022) Review of "Sweetness in the Blood: Race, Risk, and Type 2 Diabetes". Bulletin of the History of Medicine (pp. 146-147).
Book
Anne Pollock;
(2021)
Sickening: Anti-Black Racism and Health Disparities in the United States
(/isis/citation/CBB548925523/)
Thesis
McGuire, Laurette Ann;
(2012)
Native Americans and Type 2 Diabetes: The Discourse of Predisposition and Its Politics
(/isis/citation/CBB001567390/)
Article
Mathieu Arminjon;
(2020)
The American Roots of Social Epidemiology and its Transnational Circulation. From the African-American Hypertension Enigma to the WHO’s Recommendations
(/isis/citation/CBB733402949/)
Thesis
Carolina Major Diaz San Francisco;
(2016)
Migration, transnationalism, illness and healing: Toward the consolidation of the self among the Congolese diaspora in Boston and Lynn, MA
(/isis/citation/CBB781976165/)
Article
Ayah Nuriddin;
(2021)
Black Public Health
(/isis/citation/CBB777523991/)
Book
Holloway, Karla F. C.;
(2011)
Private Bodies, Public Texts: Race, Gender, and a Cultural Bioethics
(/isis/citation/CBB001200198/)
Thesis
Jazmin Antwynette Evans;
(2019)
Scientific Racism's Role in the Social Thought of African Intellectual, Moral, and Physical Inferiority
(/isis/citation/CBB578195827/)
Article
Clay Davis;
(December 2020)
Homo adhaerens: Risk and adherence in biomedical HIV prevention research
(/isis/citation/CBB559629478/)
Article
Jill A. Fisher;
(March 2015)
Feeding and Bleeding: The Institutional Banalization of Risk to Healthy Volunteers in Phase I Pharmaceutical Clinical Trials
(/isis/citation/CBB066653855/)
Article
Fritz Handerer;
Peter Kinderman;
Carsten Timmermann;
Sara J Tai;
(2021)
How did mental health become so biomedical? The progressive erosion of social determinants in historical psychiatric admission registers
(/isis/citation/CBB109132105/)
Article
Lisa Lindén;
(July 2021)
Moving Evidence: Patients’ Groups, Biomedical Research, and Affects
(/isis/citation/CBB080289080/)
Article
Elina Helosvuori;
Riikka Homanen;
(June 2022)
When craft kicks back: Embryo culture as knowledge production in the context of the transnational fertility industry
(/isis/citation/CBB035082879/)
Article
Beth Greenhough;
Emma Roe;
(July 2018)
Exploring the Role of Animal Technologists in Implementing the 3Rs: An Ethnographic Investigation of the UK University Sector
(/isis/citation/CBB661318783/)
Book
Laurent Pordié;
Stephan Kloos;
(2022)
Healing at the Periphery: Ethnographies of Tibetan Medicine in India
(/isis/citation/CBB582163592/)
Book
Tuchman, Arleen Marcia;
(2020)
Diabetes: A History of Race and Disease
(/isis/citation/CBB285911296/)
Article
Arnold, David J.;
(2009)
Diabetes in the Tropics: Race, Place and Class in India, 1880--1965
(/isis/citation/CBB000932794/)
Book
Dan Royles;
(2020)
To Make the Wounded Whole: The African American Struggle against HIV/AIDS
(/isis/citation/CBB139646090/)
Article
Pamela Sankar;
Jonathan Kahn;
(2005)
BiDil: Race Medicine Or Race Marketing?
(/isis/citation/CBB017701425/)
Article
Natali Valdez;
(2022)
The Politics of Postgenomic Reproduction: Exploring Pregnant Narratives from within a Clinical Trial
(/isis/citation/CBB617544692/)
Book
Jan Ovesen;
Ing-Britt Trankell;
(2010)
Cambodians and Their Doctors: A Medical Anthropology of Colonial and Post-Colonial Cambodia
(/isis/citation/CBB950202829/)
Be the first to comment!