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Series: The collaborative turn: interdisciplinarity across the

human sciences
December 9, 2014 (http://somatosphere.net/2014/12/confusion-truth-andbureaucracy-a-reply-to-fitzgerald-and-callard.html)

Confusion, Truth, and Bureaucracy:


A reply to Fitzgerald and Callard
(http://somatosphere.net/2014/12/confusiontruth-and-bureaucracy-a-reply-tofitzgerald-and-callard.html)

Science,
Medicine,
and Anthropology
A collaborative website
covering the intersections of
medical anthropology,
science and technology
studies, cultural psychiatry,
psychology and bioethics.

By Anthony Stavrianakis (http://somatosphere.net/author/anthony-stavrianakis),


Gaymon Bennett (http://somatosphere.net/author/gaymon-bennett), Lyle Fearnley
(http://somatosphere.net/author/lyle-fearnley) and Paul Rabinow
(http://somatosphere.net/author/paul-rabinow)
This article is part of the series: The collaborative turn: interdisciplinarity across the
human sciences (http://somatosphere.net/series/collaborative-turn)

Des Fitzgerald and Felicity Callard have recently offered some advice
(http://somatosphere.net/2014/11/entangled.html), a normative orientation
even, for those engaging in collaboration:

Living well in a collaborative mode is about resisting the urge to sort


things out it is about quelling the desire to be clear, at all times, on
who I am, and what I am doing, and whether or

November 3, 2014 (http://somatosphere.net/2014/11/entangled.html)

Entangled in the collaborative turn:


observations from the field
(http://somatosphere.net/2014/11/entangled.html)
By Des Fitzgerald (http://somatosphere.net/author/des-fitzgerald) and Felicity Callard
(http://somatosphere.net/author/felicity-callard)
This article is part of the series: The collaborative turn: interdisciplinarity across the
human sciences (http://somatosphere.net/series/collaborative-turn)

If there really has been a collaborative turn between the social and biological
sciences, then the stakes of that turn are still very much to be negotiated.
Collaboration, of course, is not a practice or a structure simply to be aimed for:
like all ethical and methodological commitments, collaboration is made in the
turning (http://anthropos-lab.net/bpc/2014/09/collaboration-responsemarcus-and-fischer) and thus the actual forms

July 14, 2014 (http://somatosphere.net/2014/07/the-collaborative-turninterdisciplinarity-across-the-human-sciences.html)

The collaborative turn:


interdisciplinarity across the human
sciences
(http://somatosphere.net/2014/07/thecollaborative-turninterdisciplinarity-across-thehuman-sciences.html)
By Des Fitzgerald (http://somatosphere.net/author/des-fitzgerald), Nev Jones
(http://somatosphere.net/author/nev-jones), Suparna Choudhury
(http://somatosphere.net/author/suparna), Michele Friedner
(http://somatosphere.net/author/michele-friedner), Nadine Levin
(http://somatosphere.net/author/nadine-levin), Stephanie Lloyd
(http://somatosphere.net/author/stephanie-lloyd), Todd Meyers
(http://somatosphere.net/author/todd-meyers), Neely Myers
(http://somatosphere.net/author/neely-myers) and Eugene Raikhel
(http://somatosphere.net/author/eugene)
This article is part of the series: The collaborative turn: interdisciplinarity across the
human sciences (http://somatosphere.net/series/collaborative-turn)

Questions of health, medicine and science have long animated sub-disciplinary


attentions in the social sciences and humanities. Recently, however, research
around these topics has taken a marked collaborative turn. If topics in the
medical and health sciences were once straightforward objects of study for
anthropological, sociological or philosophical analysis, increasingly, to work
on such topics often means also to work

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