“How Do You Know Unless You Look?”: Brain Imaging, Biopower and Practical Neuroscience [Book Review]

Journal of Medical Humanities 29 (3):147-161 (2008)
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Abstract

Brain imaging is a persuasive visual rhetoric by which neuroscience is articulated as relevant to the construction and maintenance of desirable selves. In this essay, I describe how “brain-based self-help” literature disseminates neuroscientific vocabularies to public audiences. In this genre, brain images are an authoritative visual resource for translating neuroscience into a comprehensive program for living. I use Foucault’s discussion of biopower to describe the ways in which brain-based self-help literature enables self-constitution in a biosocial age where health is a central means of communicating personal worth, social value and political order. The implications of this continuous self-fashioning are not limited to the personal realm but have important political consequences

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References found in this work

The Politics of Life Itself.Nikolas Rose - 2001 - Theory, Culture and Society 18 (6):1-30.
Empire.Michael Hardt & Antonio Negri - 2002 - Utopian Studies 13 (1):148-152.
Is It Me or My Brain? Depression and Neuroscientific Facts.Joseph Dumit - 2003 - Journal of Medical Humanities 24 (1/2):35-47.
Self-improvement.Ian Hacking - 1986 - In Michel Foucault & David Couzens Hoy, Foucault: a critical reader. New York, NY, USA: Blackwell. pp. 235--240.

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