Oni-Orisan Adeola, Aboii Sheyda M, Edu Ugo Felicia
Department of Family & Community Medicine, University of California Davis, Sacramento, California, USA.
Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
Med Anthropol Q. 2024 Dec;38(4):379-392. doi: 10.1111/maq.12908. Epub 2025 Jan 13.
Despite the transformative contributions of Black feminist thought, medical anthropology often fails to recognize or center the works of Black feminist thinkers. We argue that Black feminist theory is critical for a study and praxis of new approaches to healing, health, medicine, illness, disability, and care. We can't continue to simply recognize that current systems are failing us; Black feminist theory moves us past recognition toward transformative liberation. This special issue emerges from works and conversations leading up to, during, and after the first Black Feminist Health Science Studies Collaboratory, held virtually in May 2021. Through the Collaboratory, we propose a new form of coming together around the sharing of knowledge and practice based in Black feminist thought and Black feminist healing arts. The collection of works that follow demonstrates and provides practical means toward a more liberatory practice of medical anthropology.
尽管黑人女性主义思想做出了变革性贡献,但医学人类学往往未能认识到黑人女性主义思想家的作品,或将其置于核心地位。我们认为,黑人女性主义理论对于研究和实践治疗、健康、医学、疾病、残疾及护理的新方法至关重要。我们不能再仅仅认识到当前的体系正在让我们失望;黑人女性主义理论推动我们从认识走向变革性的解放。本期特刊源自2021年5月以线上形式举办的首届黑人女性主义健康科学研究协作实验室之前、期间及之后的作品和对话。通过该协作实验室,我们提议围绕基于黑人女性主义思想和黑人女性主义治疗艺术的知识与实践共享,形成一种新的团结形式。随后的作品集展示并提供了实现更具解放性的医学人类学实践的实用方法。