2013
DOI: 10.1177/0306312713505003
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The perils and promises of microbial abundance: Novel natures and model ecosystems, from artisanal cheese to alien seas

Abstract: Microbial life has been much in the news. From outbreaks of Escherichia coli to discussions of the benefits of raw and fermented foods to recent reports of life forms capable of living in extreme environments, the modest microbe has become a figure for thinking through the presents and possible futures of nature, writ large as well as small. Noting that dominant representations of microbial life have shifted from an idiom of peril to one of promise, we argue that microbes -especially when thriving as microbial… Show more

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Cited by 166 publications
(90 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
(52 reference statements)
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“…These may include bodies, but they may take us to places -e.g. microbial modelling (Paxson and Helmreich 2013), global circulatory systems (Nading 2016), crosscritter viruses (Lowe and M€ unster 2016;Grant 2016;Kelly 2012), or the commensality of walking and feeding (Ibañez Martin 2015) -where bodies constrain our analytic capacities. Indeed, when it comes to fashioning a medical anthropology that is not centred upon bodies, we could easily draw inspiration from the corpus of Schepher Hughes, who has devoted recent decades to tracing the uneven circulation of organs across vast geospatial terrain, or Lock, who has studied the sciences of dementia and epigenetics in a way that interrupts bodily boundaries by distributing bodies across personhood and time.…”
Section: Postscript: Planetary Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These may include bodies, but they may take us to places -e.g. microbial modelling (Paxson and Helmreich 2013), global circulatory systems (Nading 2016), crosscritter viruses (Lowe and M€ unster 2016;Grant 2016;Kelly 2012), or the commensality of walking and feeding (Ibañez Martin 2015) -where bodies constrain our analytic capacities. Indeed, when it comes to fashioning a medical anthropology that is not centred upon bodies, we could easily draw inspiration from the corpus of Schepher Hughes, who has devoted recent decades to tracing the uneven circulation of organs across vast geospatial terrain, or Lock, who has studied the sciences of dementia and epigenetics in a way that interrupts bodily boundaries by distributing bodies across personhood and time.…”
Section: Postscript: Planetary Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[4,43,44] Yet a recent collaboration between evolutionary biologists, microbiologists, and archeologists has usefully pointed to how human practices and living conditions in proximity to livestock have shaped microbial exposures. Social scientists www.advancedsciencenews.com www.bioessays-journal.com from anthropology, history, geography, politics, and economics have neither participated in nor led microbiome studies in great numbers.…”
Section: Social Sciences and Microbiome Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It attunes ethnography to the materials and techniques sought after to gauge and stabilize patterns suffused with differences. As Heather Paxson and Stefan Helmreich (, 173) note in their work on microbes, “Microbes embody potential not because of their brute materiality, but because they can be enrolled in modeling, and thereby shaping, new food science and politics.” The stories of the vada pav interrupt a smooth scan over the field of street food that may mistakenly identify efforts to transform food as easily predictable and thus easily translatable into politics. The differences in these stories clarify what kinds of arrangements between foods and politics are bearable amid efforts to conserve or strain patterns.…”
Section: Conclusion: the Slash Of The Streetmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Food processing calls forth an apparatus of industry focused on changing discernible ingredients and distilling contaminants from a pure product. Processing also can be understood as a mode of value transformation, as raw elements become food through craft and industrial food sciences (Paxson ; Paxson and Helmreich ; Weiss ). I define processing in this light: it is a transformation that imparts value.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%