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Thinking In Between

Thinking In Between

De: APOLLO Social Science Team QMUL
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Welcome to Thinking In Between. We explore how social theory and qualitative methods can illuminate the messy world of health and healthcare. In each episode, we invite a researcher working at the borderlands of social science and health to choose three “big ideas” that have influenced their research journey and the way they think.Copyright 2025 Ciencia Ciencias Sociales Enfermedades Físicas Hygiene & Healthy Living
Episodios
  • Problematisation, Ontological Politics, and Science and Technology Studies (Kari Lancaster)
    Apr 2 2025

    In this episode, we speak to Professor Kari Lancaster from the University of Bath. Kari speaks about her career journey so far, coming from performance studies to policy studies and then into science and technology studies (STS) "sideways". Kari is recognised for contributing empirical social science research in her specific fields of focus (drugs and addiction, and infectious disease including hepatitis C, HIV, and Covid-19). In this episode - which also took place as a live seminar - Kari shares three ideas that have shaped her thinking and research:

    • Problematisation (Carol Bacchi, Michel Foucault)
    • Ontological politics (John Law, Annemarie Mol)
    • Coming to science and technology studies (STS) "sideways"
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    47 m
  • The Normal and the Pathological, Inventive Methods, and Cyborgs and Goddesses (Natassia Brenman)
    Mar 5 2025

    Thinking In Between is back! On this episode, we welcome Dr Natassia Brenman, who is a senior qualitative researcher at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford. Nat's research focuses on the challenges around improving access to healthcare and how technologies influence health practices. Today, she discusses three big ideas that have influenced her research and thinking:

    1. Canguilhem, Georges. 1991. The Normal and the Pathological. Translated by Carolyn R. Fawcett. New York: Zone Books.
    2. Lury, C. and Wakeford on ‘Inventive methods’ – Introduction to Inventive Methods: The happening of the social. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 25–36
    3. Donna Haraway, and more recently Jasbir K Puar on ‘Cyborgs and Goddesses. Puar JK. “I Would Rather be a Cyborg than a Goddess”: Becoming-Intersectional in Assemblage Theory. In: Feminist Theory Reader. 5th ed. Routledge; 2020.
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    49 m
  • Liberation Pedagogy, Epistemic Humility, and Flourishing (Louise Younie)
    Dec 12 2024

    This month, Professor Louise Younie from the Institute of Health Sciences Education at QMUL shares three ideas that have shaped her journey as an academic, a general practitioner, a person living through cancer diagnosis and treatment, and a creative teacher. Louise's work focuses on using creative enquiry to explore professional identity formation, human flourishing, and humanising medicine.

    1) Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paolo Freire. Seabury Press, 1970 2) Epistemic Injustice: Power and the Ethics of Knowing by Miranda Fricker. Oxford University Press, 2007 3) Flourishing Spaces website - https://www.creativeenquiry.co.uk/

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    51 m
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