This essay discusses three interpretive concepts that link bioscience and biotechnology to society: the medical imaginary, the biotechnical embrace, and the clinical narrative. Drawing on research carried out in the United States and internationally on the culture and political economy of biomedicine, the essay examines these interpretive concepts through examples from studies of patients, clinicians, scientists, and venture capitalists engaged in the worlds of oncology and high technology medicine. These interpretive concepts contribute to an understanding of how the affective dimensions of the experience of patients, clinicians and scientists invested in high technology medicine are fundamental to bioscience and biomedicine, and to the political economy and culture of hope.
Categories:
- Publications in Peer Reviewed Academic Journals
- In-Depth Interview
- Observation/Participant-Observation
- Text, e.g. open-ended surveys, archived or published documents, social media
- Content Analysis
- Cancer
- Chronic Illness
- Community, Organizational, and Professional Culture
- Measuring and Conceptualizing Culture
- Specialty Care