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“Science and Sanctity”, Dr. Anita Hannig, Harry Lyman Hooker Distinguished Visiting Professor, Department of Religious Studies

University Hall, Room 122

29/10/2019, 2:00 pm - TO 29/10/2019 - 4:00 pm

Organizer: Department of Religious Studies, Faculty of Social Science & The Hannah History of Medicine Unit

My Calendar

Abstract: Science and religion are frequently conceptualized as mutually exclusive ways of understanding the world. In the Ethiopian fistula hospital where Hannig conducted months of ethnographic research, religion and hospital medicine did not occupy such separate domains. Biomedicine came to be seen as a profoundly religious endeavour, and religion inflected surgical treatment each step of the way. What do the overlaps between these ostensibly disparate epistemic systems reveal about contemporary hospital work? How do actors in these spaces envision the work of healing? Once we begin to see medicine and religion as complementary rather than opposed, we will gain a much better sense of how they can work together in therapeutic settings.

Biography

Anita Hannig is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Brandeis University, where she teaches classes on medicine, death, and dying. She earned her Master’s and PhD in anthropology from University of Chicago. Her first book, Beyond Surgery (2017), won the Eileen Basker Memorial Price from the Society for Medical Anthropology in home discipline, and her work has been supported by numerous grants and fellowships. Since 2015, Hannig has conducted research on assisted dying in Oregon and Washington, working with patients, caregivers, physicians, and lawmakers to understand how access to these laws is changing the ways Americans view and manage the process of dying. She is currently writing up her findings for her upcoming book, The Day I Die: Assisted Dying in the Age of Medicine.

This talk is co-sponsored by the following:
Department of Religious Studies
Midwifery Program
Global Health Program
Department of Family Medicine
Hannah History of Medicine and Medical Humanities Speaker Series

The Harry Lyman Hooker Distinguished Visiting Professorship is made possible by the Faculty of Social Science.
The Hannah History of Medicine and Medical Humanities Speaker Series is made possible by an endowment from Associated Medical Services, AMS.