The Picture of Health

We carry our most intimate view of nature within our pictures of health. These images of health, often more amenable to ablenationalism than to a world of intra-active becoming, inform not only neoliberal policy, but ecological vision, including ecospiritualities. Increasingly “the politics of healt...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Worldviews
Main Author: Betcher, Sharon V. 1956- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Brill 2015
In: Worldviews
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Health / Ideology / Self-responsibility / Handicap / Spirituality
RelBib Classification:NBE Anthropology
NCC Social ethics
NCH Medical ethics
VA Philosophy
ZB Sociology
Further subjects:B Health disability ecospirituality responsibilization
Online Access: Volltext (Verlag)
Description
Summary:We carry our most intimate view of nature within our pictures of health. These images of health, often more amenable to ablenationalism than to a world of intra-active becoming, inform not only neoliberal policy, but ecological vision, including ecospiritualities. Increasingly “the politics of health” constitutes something like a structure of exclusion, a “racism that is biological” (Foucault). Since these intimate images of nature—these “pictures of health”—may be aggravating the next great planetary divide, disability studies might differently shape what we make of the picture of health, the “nature” that informs it, and a religious response to it. This article uses critical disability studies to examine the ways in which the ideology of health, often motivating ecological concern and religious seeking, can coincidentally collude with neoliberal responsibilization and biotechnologically supported transhumanism, generating policy enclosures of the gen-rich against the “refuse/d” or “waste/d.”
ISSN:1568-5357
Contains:In: Worldviews
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/15685357-01901002