Recent sociological analyses of the intersections of race and science recognise race’s quality as an enacted object. Through this analytic lens, race is always materialising in the practices and processes that enrol it and therefore enjoys a kind of multiplicity. The context of blood stem cell transplantation, a scientific domain marked by a more and less explicitly racialised logic, offers an opportunity to see the conceptual assertion of race’s multiplicity play out. Indeed, an exploration of the UK’s stem cell inventory reveals—through analysis of interviews, policy and parliamentary meetings—how race materialises in the various practices that comprise this increasingly popular cancer treatment option. Looking at practices of recruitment, inventory management and tissue selection in particular provides an interesting window to look upon race and the many signifiers that implicate it. These cases reveal moments of race’s stablisation and silencing; its oscillation between the status of vital information to the life of a public stem cell inventory, and of secondary data that provides little useful information to clinicians selecting tissue. Adopting an analytic lens that attends to race’s multiple enactments allows us to begin asking why enactments take the shape they do, and why the particular practices that mobilise them come to be.
...More
Article
Sonja Erikainen;
Anna Couturier;
Sarah Chan;
(2020)
Marketing Experimental Stem Cell Therapies in the UK: Biomedical Lifestyle Products and the Promise of Regenerative Medicine in the Digital Era
(/isis/citation/CBB771315477/)
Chapter
Lorenzo Beltrame;
(2015)
Cellule e ordine sociale: il dibattito italiano sulle cellule staminali
(/isis/citation/CBB813029159/)
Article
Liu, Jennifer A.;
(2012)
Asian Regeneration? Technohybridity in Taiwan's Biotech?
(/isis/citation/CBB001251521/)
Thesis
Ellison, Brooke Mackenzie;
(2012)
Life Lines: Stem Cell Research in a Globalized World
(/isis/citation/CBB001562809/)
Article
Shim, Janet K;
Darling, Katherine Weatherford;
Lappe, Martine D;
Thomson, L Katherine;
Lee, Sandra Soo-Jin;
Hiatt, Robert A;
Ackerman, Sara L;
(2014)
Homogeneity and Heterogeneity as Situational Properties: Producing---and Moving beyond?---Race in Post-Genomic Science
(/isis/citation/CBB001421183/)
Book
Angela Saini;
(2019)
Superior: The Return of Race Science
(/isis/citation/CBB298049329/)
Article
Reardon, Jenny;
(2012)
The Democratic, Anti-Racist Genome? Technoscience at the Limits of Liberalism
(/isis/citation/CBB001251158/)
Book
Christopher W. Wells;
(2018)
Environmental Justice in Postwar America: A Documentary Reader
(/isis/citation/CBB614616258/)
Article
Aaron Panofsky;
Joan Donovan;
(October 2019)
Genetic ancestry testing among white nationalists: From identity repair to citizen science
(/isis/citation/CBB869271385/)
Article
Fortier, Anne-Marie;
(2012)
Genetic Indigenisation in “The People of the British Isles”
(/isis/citation/CBB001251159/)
Article
Widmer, Alexandra;
(2014)
Making Blood “Melanesian”: Fieldwork and Isolating Techniques in Genetic Epidemiology (1963--1976)
(/isis/citation/CBB001421071/)
Book
Jenny Bangham;
(2020)
Blood Relations: Transfusion and the Making of Human Genetics
(/isis/citation/CBB189983505/)
Article
Jaehwan Hyun;
(2019)
Blood Purity and Scientific Independence: Blood Science and Postcolonial Struggles in Korea, 1926–1975
(/isis/citation/CBB792869780/)
Article
Turda, Marius;
(2007)
From Craniology to Serology: Racial Anthropology in Interwar Hungary and Romania
(/isis/citation/CBB000773071/)
Article
Bangham, Jenny;
(2014)
Blood Groups and Human Groups: Collecting and Calibrating Genetic Data after World War Two
(/isis/citation/CBB001421068/)
Article
Lipphardt, Veronika;
(2014)
“Geographical Distribution Patterns of Various Genes”: Genetic Studies of Human Variation after 1945
(/isis/citation/CBB001421066/)
Article
Villella, Peter B.;
(2011)
“Pure and Noble Indians, Untainted by Inferior Idolatrous Races”: Native Elites and the Discourse of Blood Purity in Late Colonial Mexico
(/isis/citation/CBB001231764/)
Article
Edna Suárez-Díaz;
(2017)
Blood Diseases in the Backyard: Mexican "indígenas" as a Population of Cognition in the Mid-1960s
(/isis/citation/CBB236322309/)
Book
Jan Marten Ivo Klaver;
(2023)
Science, Religion and Society. Nineteenth-Century Cultural Contexts
(/isis/citation/CBB842010654/)
Chapter
Federico Roggero;
(2020)
Leggi per gestire una Grande Guerra. Tra Italia ed Inghilterra
(/isis/citation/CBB668766720/)
Be the first to comment!