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Making Bio-Expectations

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  • David Factor

Abstract

This paper marks one attempt to open up the boundaries of humanitarianism to the diverse effects of scientific objects, practices and technologies. It follows the frontiers of their effects with one particularly consequential practice of scientific reductionism through its implication with vitamin A deficiency. I open up how the scientific articulation of vitamin A is not simply about reductionism as a process of limiting, but one that unfolds as something more malleable, more multiple; how it is a shifting, distributed reality that speaks of the ongoing effects of reductionism as giving life to, among other things, emotive abstractions, and efforts to widen a distinctly humanitarian promise. I show how this scientific practice puts into play a set of emotive abstractions around the figure of the 'Third World child', un/remaking the problem as a morally tense 'bio-expectation' that ensures the survival of children across the generalised expanse of the Global South.

Suggested Citation

  • David Factor, 2015. "Making Bio-Expectations," Journal of Cultural Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 8(3), pages 292-308, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:jculte:v:8:y:2015:i:3:p:292-308
    DOI: 10.1080/17530350.2015.1039460
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    1. Stuart Gillespie & Milla McLachlan & Roger Shrimpton, 2003. "Combating Malnutrition : Time to Act," World Bank Publications - Books, The World Bank Group, number 15120.
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