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Health and Illness in a Global Context (ANTH30026)
Undergraduate level 3Points: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
About this subject
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Semester 2
Overview
Availability | Semester 2 |
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What is wellness? How do people identify when a person is in a state of dis-ease? And how do answers to these questions and many others around health and wellbeing in different parts of the world reveal not only remarkable diversity but also globalising tendencies, for example around the phenomena of self-care and the commodification of wellness? This subject will help students develop an interdisciplinary and comparative understanding of the critical relationship between health, well-being, disease and culture. The readings and lectures will explore how medical anthropologists have theorised healthcare practices and disease around the world. They will emphasise how local experiences of wellbeing are linked with larger global economic and political processes as well as changing environmental conditions. A range of media representations will be examined to delve into cultural worlds of health, near and far. Readings and tutorial discussions will enrich and complicate our thinking about the connections between individual meaning and collective experience, the structuring of larger historical, political, economic, social and cultural forces impacting wellness, and critical health challenges that face us all in the world today.
Intended learning outcomes
Students who complete this subject should be able to:
- Demonstrate an understanding of the historical background of the study of well-being and disease in anthropology and theory in medical anthropology
- Identify and describe some anthropological frameworks for understanding and interpreting well-being and disease
- Demonstrate an understanding of key theoretical debates in anthropology and an ability to connect theory to practice
- Engage in critical discussions of ethnographic and anthropological texts and media representations
- Demonstrate an understanding of medical anthropology from a perspective that prioritises ethnographic study as a method
- Develop a foundational understanding of key theoretical debates in the anthropological study of health and wellness
- Communicate effectively in a variety of written and oral methods about medical anthropology.
Generic skills
Students who complete this subject should be able to:
- Apply diverse perspectives in understanding contemporary society and culture
- Articulate how theories shape understandings of the world and how they have changed over time
- Contextualise specific cases within a broader comparative context
- Communicate effectively in a range of written and oral formats
- Work reflexively and independently to apply concepts to practice.
Last updated: 4 March 2025