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  1. “Life Begins When They Steal Your Bicycle”: Cross-Cultural Practices of Personhood at the Beginnings and Ends of Life.Lynn M. Morgan - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (1):8-15.
    A friend once told me I was wasting my time writing about cross-cultural perspectives on the beginnings of life. “Your work is interesting for its curiosity value,” he said, “but fundamentally worthless. What happens in other cultures is totally irrelevant to what is happening here.” Those were discouraging words, but as I followed the American debates about the beginnings and ends of life, it seemed he was right. Anthropologists have written a great deal about birth and death rites in other (...)
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  • Women's Bodies, Women's Selves: Illness Narratives and the `Andean' Body.Ann Miles - 1998 - Body and Society 4 (3):1-19.
    Using the phenomenological perspective provided by the concept of embodiment, this article shows that in Cuenca, Ecuador, knowledge about the body is fluid and during illness women can seek reassurance and explanations from multiple knowledge systems, including locally understood subordinate ones. Employing the concept of `character', as described by Ricoeur, as an explanation for why some women are more vulnerable to illness than others, the author argues that gender ideologies and notions of self-identity intersect in Ecuadorian conceptions of weakness and (...)
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  • “Life Begins When They Steal Your Bicycle”: Cross-Cultural Practices of Personhood at the Beginnings and Ends of Life.Lynn M. Morgan - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (1):8-15.
    This paper examines two reasons anthropological expertise has recently come to be considered relevant to American debates about the beginnings and ends of life. First, bioethicists and clinicians working to accommodate diverse perspectives into clinical decision-making have come to appreciate the importance of culture. Second, anthropologists are the recognized authorities on the cultural logic and behaviors of the “Other.” Yet the definitions of culture with which bioethicists and clinicians operate may differ from those used by contemporary anthropologists, who view culture (...)
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  • Actualités de la personne en Mélanésie.Shirley Lindenbaum - 2008 - Cahiers Internationaux de Sociologie 124 (1):83.
    Les anthropologues qui étudient les effets de la « modernité » en Mélanésie ont donné un souffle nouveau à la question de la personne relationnelle. On observe l’apparition de personnes plus individualisées, plus autonomes dans le contexte de la conversion au christianisme, de la consommation de biens et du travail salarié. Comportements sexuels et sensibilités des jeunes se transforment à la faveur de leur expérience d’idées nouvelles sur les rapports amoureux et de formes inédites d’érotisme, bien que toujours soumis à (...)
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  • Actualités de la personne en Mélanésie.Shirley Lindenbaum - 2008 - Cahiers Internationaux de Sociologie 1 (124):83-101.
    Les anthropologues qui étudient les effets de la « modernité » en Mélanésie ont donné un souffle nouveau à la question de la personne relationnelle. On observe l’apparition de personnes plus individualisées, plus autonomes dans le contexte de la conversion au christianisme, de la consommation de biens et du travail salarié. Comportements sexuels et sensibilités des jeunes se transforment à la faveur de leur expérience d’idées nouvelles sur les rapports amoureux et de formes inédites d’érotisme, bien que toujours soumis à (...)
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  • Measurements, Morality, and the Politics of “Normal” Infant Growth.Leslie Butt - 1999 - Journal of Medical Humanities 20 (2):81-100.
    Although the birth and early life of an infant is similar throughout the world, meanings ascribed to infants differ according to cultural values and beliefs. This essay describes how scholars and healers have come to see the infant as distinct from other types of people, and what implications this distinction carries for how health care is practiced. The first portion of this essay explores how understanding of the infant, particularly the well-accepted notion of “normal” infant growth and development, came to (...)
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  • Getting Noticed.David F. Lancy & M. Annette Grove - 2011 - Human Nature 22 (3):281-302.
    Although it is rarely named, the majority of societies in the ethnographic record demarcate a period between early childhood and adolescence. Prominent signs of demarcation are, for the first time, pronounced gender separation in fact and in role definition; increased freedom of movement for boys, while girls may be bound more tightly to their mothers; and heightened expectations for socially responsible behavior. But above all, middle childhood is about coming out of the shadows of community life and assuming a distinct, (...)
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  • De‐Homogenizing American Individualism: Socializing Hard and Soft Individualism in Manhattan and Queens.Adrie Suzanne Kusserow - 1999 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 27 (2):210-234.
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  • Do Cyborgs Desire Their Own Subjection? Thinking Anthropology With Cinematic Science Fiction.Jessica Dickson - 2016 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 36 (1):78-84.
    Primarily a thought experiment, this essay explores how cinematic cyborgs and anthropological approaches to personhood and subjectivity might be theorized together. The 1980s and 1990s showed considerable investment by media producers, and strong reception by audiences and culture critics, to science fiction (SF) film and television franchises that brought new attention to the imagined cyborg subject in the popular imagination of the time. Outside of Hollywood, this same period was marked by biomedical and technological advancements that raised profound implications for (...)
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  • Whom Would Animals Designate as Persons? On the Avoidance of Anthropocentrism and the Inclusion of Others.Elizabeth Oriel - 2014 - Journal of Evolution and Technology 24 (3):44-59.
    Humans are animals; humans are machines. The current academic and popular dialogue on extending the personhood boundary to certain non-human animal species and at the same time to machines/robots reflects a dialectic about how “being human” is defined; about how we perceive our species and ourselves in relation to the environment. While both paths have the potential to improve lives; these improvements differ in substance and in consequence. One route has the potential to broaden the anthropocentric focus within the West (...)
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