avril 2011

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Parution – Nouvelles questions féministes

 

Nouvelles questions féministes, vol. 30, n°1, 2011, La production d’enfants

Coordination : Françoise Messant, Marianne Modak, Anne-Françoise Praz

Edito
Anne-Françoise Praz, Marianne Modak, Françoise Messant
« Produire des enfants » aujourd’hui : un défi pour l’analyse féministe

Grand Angle
Laure Moguérou, Nathalie Bajos, Michèle Ferrand
Les maternités dites tardives en France : Enjeu de santé publique ou dissidence sociale ?

Fenneke Reysoo, Pien Bos
N’est pas mère qui veut. Le paradoxe de l’adoption internationale
Hélène Joly
L’injonction à l’homoparentalité, cache-sexe de l’éros lesbien

Priscille Touraille
Du désir de procréer : des cultures plus naturalistes que la Nature ?

Champ libre
Mascha Madörin
Maternité et rapports intergénérationnels en Suisse : un essai d’économie féministe
Traduction : Natalie Benelli

Françoise Armengaud
À la mémoire de Michèle Causse, une grande figure du lesbianisme politique

Parcours
Marianne Modak, Françoise Messant
Entretien avec Karine Clerc, travailleuse sociale de proximité.

 

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Parution – Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences

 

 

Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences, avril 2011, vol. 66, n°2

 

Noémi Tousignant
The Rise and Fall of the Dolorimeter: Pain, Analgesics, and the Management of Subjectivity in Mid-twentieth-Century United States

Stephen T. Casper
Trust, Protocol, Gender, and Power in Interwar British Biomedical Research: Kathleen Chevassut and the “Germ” of Multiple Sclerosis

Sean Dyde
The Chief Seat of Mischief: Soldier’s Heart in the First World War

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Parution – Research on aging

Research on aging, mai 2011, vol. 33, n°3
Editorial
Debra Parker Oliver

The Effect of Productive Activities on Depressive Symptoms Among Older Adults With Dual Sensory Loss
Michele Capella McDonnall

The Changing Roles of Disability, Veteran, and Socioeconomic Status in Elderly Interstate Migration
Karen Smith Conway and Jonathan C. Rork

BMI Trajectories During the Transition to Older Adulthood: Persistent, Widening, or Diminishing Disparities by Ethnicity and Education?
Katrina M. Walsemann and Jennifer A. Ailshire

Age-related Changes in Biomarkers: Longitudinal Data From a Population-based Sample
Dana A. Glei, Noreen Goldman, Yu-Hsuan Lin, and Maxine Weinstein

The Long Arm of Offspring: Adult Children’s Troubles as Teenagers and Elderly Parents’ Mental Health
Melissa A. Milkie, Dawn R. Norris, and Alex Bierman

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Parution – Sexualities 


Sexualities, avril 2010, vol. 14, n°2.

 

Pain as culture: A postcolonial feminist approach to S/M and women’s agency
Maneesha Deckha

BDSM as therapy?
Danielle Lindemann

Queering the birthing space: Phenomenological interpretations of the relationships between lesbian couples and perinatal nurses in the context of birthing care
Lisa Goldberg, Ami Harbin, and Sue Campbell

Circuits of power, circuits of pleasure: Sexual scripting in gay men’s bottom narratives
Trevor Hoppe

Love, lust and the Irish: Exploring intimate lives through Angela Macnamara’s problem page, 1963-1980
Paul Ryan

A good man is impossible to find: Brokeback Mountain as heteronormative tragedy
Sheila J. Nayar

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Bourse – Travel Fellowship in the History of the Academic Health Center & Health Sciences

 

University of Minnesota, 2010-2011

Purpose: The Travel Fellowship in the History of the Academic Health Center & Health Sciences at the University of Minnesota is intended to promote research on post-World War II developments in academic health centers and health science research using the University of Minnesota Archives. The University of Minnesota Program in the History of Medicine in conjunction with the Academic Health Center History Project (http://z.umn.edu/ahcarchives) will offer up to two fellowships per year to interested scholars whose research is well suited to the health science and administrative collections in the University Archives. Where possible, preference will be given to early career scholars: graduate students in the research stage of their dissertation and recent Ph.D.s.

University of Minnesota Archives Holdings: The University of Minnesota Archives http://special.lib.umn.edu/uarch/ house numerous collections related to the history of the Academic Health Center (AHC), its forerunning administrative configuration the College of Medical Sciences, and the records of the six schools and colleges that comprise the Academic Health Center: medicine, nursing, public health, pharmacy, dentistry, and veterinary medicine. The Archives also house collections pertaining to interdisciplinary centers within the Academic Health Center and oral histories and personal papers of prominent faculty and administrators.

Finding aids for many of the collections at the University Archives can be found at http://special.lib.umn.edu/uarch/. Digital documents related to the AHC and University administration are available through the University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy at  http://conservancy.umn.edu/ . Applicants are encouraged to contact AHC Archivist Erik Moore at  moore144@umn.edu to discuss the collections before applying.

Application and Expectations: Applicants must submit a curriculum vitae, names and contact information of two referees, a brief proposal of no more than two pages, and a one-page proposed budget. The one- to two-page proposal should outline clearly the purpose of the research and its central questions, what records or materials will be used, any bigger project of which this research is a part, and the intended product(s) such as a dissertation, publications, or documentaries.
Selection of fellows will be based on the decision of a multi-disciplinary committee.

Fellowship recipients will be required to submit a short report on their research and asked to present their work in progress with interested faculty, staff, and students while visiting at the University. Recipients are also required to supply the University Libraries with a copy of any publication resulting from research conducted as a result of the grant.

Duration and Support: The fellowship covers a flexible visit of between one to four weeks. The amount of the fellowship is up to $1,000.00 to support expenses related to travel, lodging, research costs, and other incidental expenses. The fellowship is available for a single, continuous research trip between the dates July 1, 2011 and June 30, 2012.

Dates:

Deadline for applications is June 1, 2011. Candidates will be informed of the results by June 30 and the fellowship will be available immediately.

Applications should be submitted via email. Be sure that your last name appears in the filename of each document. Send applications to:

Dr. Mary Thomas, Program in the History of Medicine, University of Minnesota, hmed@umn.edu (612-624-4416).

If you have any questions about the travel grant, please contact Dominique Tobbell at dtobbell@umn.edu (612-626-5114), or speak to her at the upcoming meeting of the American Association for the History of Medicine.

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Contrat post-doctoral – Expertise en santé publique / santé au travail

Contrat post-doctoral CNRS

Laboratoire de rattachement : Groupe de sociologie politique européenne (GSPE, PRISME, UMR 7012, CNRS, Université de Strasbourg)

Poste à pourvoir dans le cadre du programme de recherche INDEX « L’indépendance des experts et ses problèmes dans le champ de la santé publique : expertises en pratique et enjeux de communication » financé par l’ANR, responsable scientifique : Emmanuel Henry (GSPE), partenaires : Claude Gilbert (PACTE) et Jean-Noël Jouzel (CSO)

Contrat à temps plein sur deux ans à partir de septembre 2011.

Lieu de travail : Strasbourg

Niveau de salaire : 2400 euros bruts mensuels environ.

Le post-doctorant, titulaire d’une thèse de sciences sociales (sociologie, science politique, notamment), devra remplir 2 missions correspondant chacune à un mi-temps environ :

1re mission : Organisation et secrétariat scientifique d’un séminaire de recherche et travail éditorial sur le projet de publication qui lui est lié.
Le séminaire rassemble une vingtaine de chercheurs à raison de 2 à 3 séances par an.
En lien avec les responsables du projet et l’équipe administrative de la Misha, le travail consiste à organiser le séminaire sur un plan logistique (missions et organisation sur place), et assurer son suivi scientifique : mise en place et suivi d’outils de mutualisation de documents, relecture et corrections avant diffusion des retranscriptions des échanges, échanges avec les intervenants entre les séances, etc…
Travail d’édition : le séminaire devant déboucher sur une publication collective, le recruté assurera le travail d’édition en lien avec les responsables scientifiques : demandes formulées aux auteurs, corrections et échanges autour des textes, travail de suivi des différentes versions, relectures et corrections, etc.

2e mission : travail de recherche dans le domaine de l’expertise en santé au travail.
Ce travail de recherche portera sur un des thèmes couverts par le projet INDEX dans le domaine de la santé au travail. Il s’agira en lien avec le responsable scientifique de mener une enquête de sociologie qualitative sur l’émergence et la transformation de l’expertise publique dans le domaine de la santé mentale au travail en se centrant sur les exemples français et européens sur la période récente. Le contenu du projet lui-même devra faire l’objet d’une élaboration en commun avec les responsables du programme pour être en cohérence avec les objectifs d’ensemble du programme.

Procédure de recrutement : les candidatures pourront être reçues jusqu’au 15 mai 2011. Elles seront composées d’une lettre de motivation et d’un CV et envoyés à : emmanuel.henry@misha.fr

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Emploi – Post-Doctorat programme BioProperty

The Institute for Science, Innovation and Society (InSIS) at Oxford is seeking to appoint two postdoctoral research fellows in its new programme BioProperty (‘Biomedical Research and the Future of Property Rights’). The posts are fixed-term for two years from the date of appointment.

BioPropery is funded by a European Research Council (ERC) to investigate the dynamics of property rights in the contemporary life sciences. Central areas of investigation include: modes of collaboration for research and development on neglected diseases; use of patented transgenic animals and materials in scientific research; and the legal and scientific status of stem cell lines. The Research Fellows will work under the supervision of Javier Lezaun.

Applicants should have a PhD (or equivalent) in the social sciences (science studies, anthropology, political science or theory, legal studies, sociology, cultural studies). Experience in designing, organizing and carrying out qualitative/ethnographic fieldwork is essential. Experience researching the social aspects of the life sciences is highly desirable.

Closing date for application: 3 May.

For more information please visit:

http://www.sbs.ox.ac.uk/about/vacancies/Pages/ResearchFellowsinBioproperty.aspx

 

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Parution – Devenir médecin. Phénoménologie de la consultation médicale

 

Victor Larger, Devenir médecin. Phénoménologie de la consultation médicale, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2011, 162 p.

Que se passe-t-il lorsque le médecin reçoit une personne qui souffre ou qui vient demander un conseil ou un certificat médical ? Sur quoi fait-il reposer sa réflexion et son acte ? Quelles sont ses pensées ? Comment voit-il le malade ? Comment se confronte-t-il, avec lui, à un avenir parfois menaçant ? Comment trouve-t-il la force d’accomplir son geste médical ? Comment un homme ordinaire devient-il médecin, qu’apprend-il qui le légitime dans ce monde particulier de la consultation médicale ?

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Appel à projet –  Fondation Internationale de Recherche Appliquée sur le Handicap

Association de préfiguration de la Fondation Internationale de Recherche Appliquée sur le Handicap (FIRAH).

La prise en compte des nouvelles approches, des nouveaux concepts et des changements de terminologies progressistes dans le champ du handicap sera recherchée.
La recherche pourra, si cela s’avère pertinent, préciser les passages des modes de travail classiques à ceux innovants et inclusifs en analysant les questions portant sur les résistances aux changements.

Date de clôture de l’appel à projets : 22 avril 2011

http://www.firah.org/les-appels-a-projet/appel-a-projets-2011

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Appel à contribution – Graduate Conference on the History of the Body

 

The Graduate History Association and the Department of History at Washington University in St. Louis are pleased to announce the inaugural Graduate Conference on the History of the Body, to be held October 20-21, 2011.

In 2001, Roy Porter remarked that body history had become the « historiographical dish of the day. » Ten years on, histories of the body continue to flourish. Often working at the interstices of a number of methods and approaches, the field has produced innovative and compelling articulations of the body as a category of historical analysis. As thinking about bodies has occasioned ongoing encounters, clashes, and border-crossings between a variety of disciplines, this conference aims to promote conversations across scholarly divides by showcasing and reflecting on graduate-level scholarship on the history of the body, in all periods and regions, and from a variety of methodological approaches. We invite papers related to a broad number of thematic areas, including but not limited to:

*normality and deviancy

*medicine and disease

*sexuality and reproduction

*food

*blood and race

*physical space

We’re also pleased to announce Professor Mary Fissell, renowned historian of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University, as the conference keynote speaker. Professor Fissell’s first book, Patients, Power and the Poor (Cambridge 1991), examined how patients’ choices shaped a health-care system in the eighteenth century. Her more recent Vernacular Bodies (Oxford 2004) explored the politics of reproduction in early modern medicine. Professor Fissell’s current project involves Aristotle’s Masterpiece, for three centuries the best-selling book about sex and reproduction. Her address will be held in conjunction with the Washington University in St. Louis Department of History Colloquium Series.

Graduate Students in any field of study are invited to submit proposals for individual research papers. Abstracts of approximately 250 words should be submitted online: http://history.artsci.wustl.edu/GHA/Conference. The deadline for submissions is June 1, 2011.

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