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  1. Rethinking agency and medical adherence technology: applying Actor Network Theory to the case study of Digital Pills.Alejandra Hurtado-de-Mendoza, Mark L. Cabling & Vanessa B. Sheppard - 2015 - Nursing Inquiry 22 (4):326-335.
    Much literature surrounding medical technology and adherence posits that technology is a mechanism for social control. This assumes that the medical establishment can take away patients' agency. Although power relationships and social control can play a key role, medical technology can also serve as an agentive tool to be utilized. We (1) offer the alternative framework of Actor Network Theory to view medical technology, (2) discuss the literature on medication adherence and technology, (3) delve into the ramifications of looking at (...)
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  • Networks and narratives: a model for ancient Greek religion?Esther Eidinow - 2011 - Kernos 24:9-38.
    Polis religion has become the dominant model for the description of ritual activity in ancient Greek communities. Indeed, scholars have invoked polis religion to try to resolve the much-debated question of the definition of magic vs. religion, arguing that particular ‘magical’ practices, and their practitioners, do not belong to ‘collective polis religion.’ However, the relationship to polis religion of a ‘magical’ practice such as the writing of binding spells is surely more ambiguous, as well as of other cult activity relating (...)
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