Week 4: The body is in the eye of the doctor

Seminar notes

Ryan Schram
ANTH 3608: Becoming cyborgs—Technology and society
August 29, 2025

Slides available at: https://anthrograph.rschram.org/cyborgs/2025/week-4/seminar

Agenda for the seminar discussion

  1. Presentations
  1. Co-texts: Go or no go?: A Mentimeter poll at https://menti.com (using code 2181 6242) or https://www.menti.com/al8djoa742na.

  2. Pros and cons: make, construct, perform, enact… other verbs?

  3. Did Annemarie Mol’s work do the job? Is it successful?

  4. How do we as ethnographers choose what we write about when reality is multiple?

  5. Ethnography is other people’s stories. Mol can only build on or interpret people’s reports of their experiences. How can she know anything?

  6. Is atherosclerosis real?

  7. What is a disease? Disease is a process. When does it start? (And what was it before?)

  8. What is self-diagnosis?

  9. A presentation by Ryan on several loose threads

Several loose threads

Questions for discussion

  1. If ANT is not a theory, but a method, then it provides no claims of an explanatory nature. Does this matter?

  2. In a separate but related discussion, Mol says that method is not observation (which presumes a dualism of representation and reality) but intervention. Knowledge is furthermore a partaking of reality (Mol 2003, 154–55). Does this apply to following, tracing, patchwork, or the methods associated with networks? If so, what does it tell us? If not, why are these methods exempt?


References

Latour, Bruno. 1994. “On Technical Mediation.” Common Knowledge 3 (2): 29–64. http://www.bruno-latour.fr/node/234.html.
Mol, Annemarie. 2003. The Body Multiple: Ontology in Medical Practice. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press. https://doi.org/10.1515/9780822384151.