Improvising Medicine

Image

License

Creative Commons Licence

Creator(s)

Contributors

Contributed date

April 19, 2018 - 7:38pm

Critical Commentary

Description of work: "In Improvising Medicine, Julie Livingston tells the story of Botswana's only dedicated cancer ward, located in its capital city of Gaborone. This affecting ethnography follows patients, their relatives, and ward staff as a cancer epidemic emerged in Botswana. The epidemic is part of an ongoing surge in cancers across the global south; the stories of Botswana's oncology ward dramatize the human stakes and intellectual and institutional challenges of an epidemic that will shape the future of global health. They convey the contingencies of high-tech medicine in a hospital where vital machines are often broken, drugs go in and out of stock, and bed-space is always at a premium. They also reveal cancer as something that happens between people. Serious illness, care, pain, disfigurement, and even death emerge as deeply social experiences. Livingston describes the cancer ward in terms of the bureaucracy, vulnerability, power, biomedical science, mortality, and hope that shape contemporary experience in southern Africa. Her ethnography is a profound reflection on the social orchestration of hope and futility in an African hospital, the politics and economics of healthcare in Africa, and palliation and disfigurement across the global south."

Language

English

Cite as

Julie Livingston, "Improvising Medicine", contributed by Angela Okune, STS Infrastructures, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 20 April 2018, accessed 17 December 2024. https://stsinfrastructures.org/content/improvising-medicine