An ethics of enchantment: forming affect and information in experimental paediatric medicine |
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Authors: | Courtney Addison |
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Affiliation: | Centre for Science in Society, Te Herenga Waka/Victoria University of Wellington, 42 Kelburn Parade, Wellington, 6012 New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Science and medicine have been cast as disenchanted arenas of modernity, even as scholars have illustrated the many enchantments of everyday life. Taking these conversations into the context of experimental paediatric medicine, I explore the dis/enchantments produced through the research ethics systems that govern interactions between medical practitioners and patients’ families. Research ethics enact forms of disenchantment, aiming to produce the informed patient-subject who can knowingly submit to the unknowns of experimental medicine. However, by following one young patient's emotive disruption of the consent process, I suggest that we instead consider an ethics of enchantment: one that recognizes the affective logics of patienthood alongside the informatic. Elaborating how ethical practice is both institutionally structured and interpersonally improvised, I develop key conversations from the anthropology of ethics, and highlight the interplay of enchantment and disenchantment that constitutes modern medical subjects. |
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