2020_21
Guía docente 
Facultad de Letras
A A 
castellano 
Antropología Médica y Salud Global (2020)
 Asignaturas
  TEORÍAS SOBRE LA SUBJETIVIDAD: MENTE, CUERPO, CEREBRO
   Fuentes de información
Básica

Abi-Rached, Joelle M., & Rose, Nikolas. 2010. “The birth of the neuromolecular gaze.” History of the Human Sciences, 23: 11-36.

Beecher, Henry K. et al. 1968. “A Definition of Irreversible Coma. Report of the Ad Hoc Committee of the Harvard Medical School to Examine the Definition of Brain Death.” JAMA, 205(6): 337-340.

Bennett, M. R. & Hacker, P. M. S. 2003. Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience. Malden, MA: Blackwell.

Bernat, James L. 2009. “Contemporary controversies in the definition of death.” Progress in Brain Research, 77: 21-31.

Choudhury, Suparna & Slaby, Jan, eds. 2012a. Critical Neuroscience. A Handbook of the Social and Cultural Contexts of Neuroscience. Malden: Blackwell.

Cooter, Roger. 1984. The Cultural Meaning of Popular Science: Phrenology and the Organisation of Consent in nineteenth-Century Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

De Vos, Jan & Pluth, Ed. eds. 2016. Neuroscience and Critique: Exploring the Limits of the Neurological Turn. New York: Routledge.

Dumit, Joseph. 2004. Picturing Personhood. Brain Scans and Biomedical Identity. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Gere, Cathy, ed. 2004. The Brain in a Vat. Special issue of Studies in History and Philosophy of Biology and the Biomedical Sciences, 35.

Greenberg, Gary. 2010. Manufacturing Depression: The Secret History of a Modern Disease. New York: Simon & Shuster.

Harrington, Anne. 2019. Mind Fixers: Psychiatry’s Troubled Search for the Biology of Mental Illness. New York: WW Norton.

Horwitz,Allan & Wakefield, Jerome. 2007. The Loss of Sadness: How Psychiatry Transformed Normal Sorrow into Depressive Disorder. New York: Oxford University Press.

Kaufman, Sharon R. & Morgan, Lynn M. 2005. “The Anthropology of the Beginnings and Ends of Life.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 34: 317-341.

Kitanaka, Junko. 2011. Depression in Japan: Psychiatric Cures for a Society in Distress. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Kitzinger, Jenny & Kitzinger, Celia. 2012. “The ‘window of opportunity’ for death after severe brain injury: family experiences,” Sociology of Health & Illness, 35: 1095-1112.

Kitzinger, Jenny & Kitzinger, Celia. 2014. “Withdrawing artificial nutrition and hydration from minimally conscious and vegetative patients: family perspectives,” Journal of Medical Ethics, 41: 157-160.

Littlefield, Melissa M. & Johnson, Jenell M. eds. 2012. The Neuroscientific Turn: Transdisciplinarity in the Age of the Brain. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Lock, Margaret. 2002. Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Luhrmann, Tanya. 2000. Of Two Minds: An Anthropologist Looks at American Psychiatry. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

Martin, Emily. 2007. Bipolar Expeditions: Mania and Depression in American Culture. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

O’Connor, Cliodhna & Joffe, Helene. 2013. “How has neuroscience affected lay understandings of personhood? A review of the evidence.” Public Understanding of Science, 22(3): 254-268.

Ortega, Francisco. 2014. Corporeality, Medical Technologies and Contemporary Culture. New York: Routledge.

Ortega, Francisco & Vidal, Fernando, eds. 2011. Neurocultures: Glimpses into an Expanding Universe. Berlin: Peter Lang.

Ozawa-de Silva, Chikako. 2002. “Beyond the body/mind? Japanese contemporary thinkers on alternative sociologies of the body,” Body and Society, 8 (2): 21-38.

Puccetti, Roland. 1969. “Brain Transplantation and Personal Identity.” Analysis, 29: 65-77.

Rose, Nikolas & Abi-Rached, Joelle M. 2013. Neuro: The New Brain Sciences and the Management of the Mind. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Complementaria

Abou-Saleh, Mohammed T. 2006. “Neuroimaging in psychiatry: an update.” Journal of Psychosomatic Research,61: 289-293.

Aldworth, Susan. 2011. “The Physical Brain and the Sense of Self: An Artist’s Exploration.” In Ortega and Vidal 2011, 273-292.

Arpaly, Nomy. 2005. “How it is not ‘just like diabetes’: Mental disorders and the moral psychologist.” Philosophical Issues, 15: 282-298.

Barilan, Yechiel M. 2002. “Head-Counting vs. Heart-Counting: An Examination of the Recent Case of the Conjoined Twins from Malta.” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 45(4): 593-603.

Barilan, Yechiel M. 2003. “One or Two: An Examination of the Recent Case of the Conjoined Twins from Malta.” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 28(1): 27-44.

Blakemore, Sarah-Jayne. 2008. “The social brain in adolescence.” Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 9: 267-277.

Carver, Joanna. 2012. “New look at Einstein’s brain pictures show his genius.” New Scientist, 20 November, www.newscientist.com/blogs/shortsharpscience/2012/11/einsteins-brain.html.

Cavanagh, Patrick. 2005. “The artist as neuroscientist.” Nature, 434: 301-307.

Chiao, Joan Y. et al. 2013. “Cultural Neuroscience: Progress and Promise.” Psychological Inquiry, 24(1): 1-19.

Choudhury, Suparna. 2010. “Culturing adolescence brain: what can neuroscience learn from anthropology?” Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 5(2-3): 159-167.

Cohn, Simon. 2010. “Picturing the brain inside, revealing the illness outside: a comparison of the different meanings attributed to brain scans by scientists and patients.” In Edwards, Harvey, and Wade 2010, 65-84.

Cohn, Simon. 2012. “Disrupting Images: Neuroscientific Representations in the Lives of Psychiatric Patients.” In Choudhury and Slaby 2012a.

De Grazia, David. 2011. “The Definition of Death.” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/death-definition/.

Di Dio, Cinzia, Macaluso, Emiliano, and Rizzolatti, Giacomo. 2007. “The Golden Beauty: Brain Response to Classical and Renaissance Sculptures.” PLoS ONE, issue 11, November: 1-9.

Dumit, Joseph. 2003. “Is it me or my brain? Depression and neuroscientific facts.” Journal of Medical Humanities, 24(12): 35-46.

Fernandez-Duque, Diego Evans, Jessica, Christian, Colton, and Hodges, Sara D. 2015. “Superfluous Neuroscience Information Makes Explanations of Psychological Phenomena More Appealing.” Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 27(5), 926-944.

Graby, Steven. 2015. “Neurodiversity: bridging the gap between the Disabled People’s Movement and the Mental Health System Survivors’ Movement?”, In Helen Spandler, Jill Anderson, and Bob Sapey, eds. Madness, Distress and the Politics of Disablement. Bristol: Policy Press.

Gray, Kurt et al. 2011. “More dead than dead: Perceptions of persons in the persistent vegetative state,” Cognition, 121(2): 275-280.

Greenberg, Gary. 2013. The Book of Woe: The DSM and the Unmaking of Psychiatry. New York: Blue Rider Press.

Hacking Ian. 2002. “Making Up People.” Historical Ontology, 99-114. Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press.

Hacking, Ian. 2006. “What is Tom saying to Maureen?” London Review of Books 28(9), www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n09/ian-hacking/what-is-tom-saying-to-maureen.

Hacking, Ian. 2009. “Autistic autobiography.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, B 364: 1467-1473.

Harrington, Anne. 2005. “The Inner Lives of Disordered Brains,” Cerebrum, https://dana.org/article/the-inner-lives-of-disordered-brains/.

Kirmayer, Laurence J. 2002. “Psychopharmacology in a Globalizing World: The Use of Antidepressants in Japan.” Transcultural Psychiatry, 39: 295-322.

Kirmayer, Laurence J., and Crafa, Daina. 2014. “What kind of science for psychiatry,” Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8, art. 435: 1-12.

Kirmayer, Laurence J., and Raikhel, Eugene. 2009. “Editorial: from Amrita to substance D: psychopharmacology, political economy, and technologies of the Self.” Transcultural Psychiatry, 46: 5-15.

Kleinman, Arthur. 2012. “Medical anthropology and mental health. Five questions for the next fifty years.” In Marcia C. Inhorn, and Emily A. Wentzell, eds. Medical Anthropology at the Intersections: Histories, Activisms, and Futures. Durham: Duke University Press.

Lakoff, Andrew. 2005. Pharmaceutical Reason: Medication and Psychiatric Knowledge in Argentina. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Lane, Christopher. 2007. Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Lende, Daniel H. and Downey, Greg. eds. 2012a. The Encultured Brain: An Introduction to Neuroanthropology. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

Maasen, Sabine, and Sutter, Barbara, eds. 2007. On Willing Selves: Neoliberal Politics and the Challenge of Neuroscience. Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan

Martin, Emily. 2010. “Self-making and the brain.” Subjectivity 3(4): 366-381.

Morioka, Masahiro. 2001. “Reconsidering Brain Death: A Lesson from Japan’s Fifteen Years of Experience.” Hastings Center Report,31(4): 41-46.

Ozawa-de Silva, Chikako. 2006. Psychotherapy and Religion in Japan: The Japanese Introspection Practice of Naikan. New York: Routledge.

Pickersgill, Martyn, Cunningham-Burley, Sarah, and Martin, Paul. 2011. “Constituting neurologic subjects: Neuroscience, subjectivity and the mundane significance of the brain.” Subjectivity, 4: 346-365.

Rose, Nikolas, and Abi-Rached, Joelle M. 2014. “ Governing through the Brain: Neuropolitics, Neuroscience and Subjectivity.” Cambridge Anthropology, 32 (1): 3-23.

Silverman, Chloe. 2008b. “Fieldwork on Another Planet: Social Science Perspectives on the Autism Spectrum.” BioSocieties, 3(3): 325-341.

Taylor, Charles. 1989. Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity. Cambridge: MA: Harvard University Press.

Thiel, Udo. 2011. The Early Modern Subject: Self-Consciousness and Personal Identity from Descartes to Hume. New York: Oxford University Press.

Uttal, William R. 2003. The New Phrenology: The Limits of Localizing Cognitive Processes in the Brain. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Waltz, M. 2005. “Reading case studies of people with autistic spectrum disorders: A cultural studies approach to issues of disability representation.” Disability & Society, 20 (5): 421-435.

Wilkes, Kathleen. 1988.

Real People: Personal Identity Without Thought Experiments

. Oxford: Clarendon Press.