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The Violence of Abstraction PDF

333 Pages·2017·28.71 MB·English
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WWaasshhiinnggttoonn UUnniivveerrssiittyy iinn SStt.. LLoouuiiss WWaasshhiinnggttoonn UUnniivveerrssiittyy OOppeenn SScchhoollaarrsshhiipp Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Arts & Sciences Dissertations Winter 12-15-2016 TThhee VViioolleennccee ooff AAbbssttrraaccttiioonn:: LLeeaarrnniinngg ttoo LLiivvee WWiitthh TTyyppee--22 DDiiaabbeetteess iinn EEvveerryyddaayy LLiiffee Jenny Epstein Washington University in St. Louis Follow this and additional works at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/art_sci_etds Part of the Anthropology Commons RReeccoommmmeennddeedd CCiittaattiioonn Epstein, Jenny, "The Violence of Abstraction: Learning to Live With Type-2 Diabetes in Everyday Life" (2016). Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 986. https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/art_sci_etds/986 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Arts & Sciences at Washington University Open Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Washington University Open Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS Anthropology Department Dissertation Examination Committee: Rebecca Lester, Chair Pete Benson John Bowen Brad Stoner Corinna Treitel The Violence of Abstraction: Learning to Live With Type-2 Diabetes in Everyday Life by Jenny Epstein A  dissertation  presented  to     The  Graduate  School     of  Washington  University  in   partial  fulfillment  of  the   requirements  for  the  degree   of  Doctor  of  Philosophy   December 2016 St. Louis, Missouri Table of Contents List of Figures .................................................................................................................... vi Acknowledgements ........................................................................................................... vii Chapter 1: Introduction ........................................................................................................1 1.1 How this project began ......................................................................................4 1.2 Scope of the project ...........................................................................................8 1.3 Foucault, Lefebvre and the anthropology of diabetes ......................................12 1.4 The violence of abstraction ..............................................................................21 1.5 A closer look at Henri Lefebvre .......................................................................23 1.6 Overview of chapter .........................................................................................24 Chapter 2: Methods ............................................................................................................27 2.1 Historical analysis ............................................................................................27 2.2 Ethnographic data collection ............................................................................29 2.3 Analytic auto-ethnography ...............................................................................30 2.4 Life-history interview tool ...............................................................................32 2.5 Recruitment sites and population interviewed .................................................38 2.6 Participation in and observation of diabetes education programs ...................45 2.7 Conferences attended .......................................................................................46 2.8 Participant observation as a HealthCare Navigator .........................................48 2.9 Interviews with health care providers ..............................................................48 2.10 Media analysis ...............................................................................................48 Chapter 3: The Re-settlement of Tacoma ..........................................................................50 3.1 “Tacoma, City of Destiny!” Connecting the old and new ...............................52 3.2 The production of uniform social space ...........................................................57 3.3 The platting of a railroad town .........................................................................60 3.4 Organized labor and the downtown core .........................................................65 3.5 Manufacturing moves out of the downtown core ............................................67                                                                                                                                                                        ii 3.6 Designation as a superfund site ........................................................................71 3.7 Loss of a city core ............................................................................................73 3.8 The rising local economic importance of healthcare .......................................74 3.9 Tacoma’s demographics and neighborhoods today .........................................80 3.10 The formation of diabetes corridors ...............................................................82 Chapter 4: Epidemiology and history of type-2 diabetes ...................................................85 4.1 Type-2 diabetes: a transmutable disease ..........................................................86 Chapter 5: Emergence of a Scientific Body .......................................................................93 5.1 Claude Bernard and the measurement of bodies ..............................................96 5.2 Creating a scientific subjectivity ......................................................................98 5.3 Insulin, self-discipline and the diabetic subject .............................................100 Chapter 6: Diabetes Education Programs ........................................................................112 6.1 Bodies in everyday life ..................................................................................113 6.2 Diabetes self-care skills .................................................................................117 6.3 American Pharmacy Association Diabetes Management program ...............119 6.4 Journey for Control: training for medical professionals ................................134 6.5 Journey for Control: observing group sessions .............................................138 6.6. Journey for Control: implications .................................................................142 6.7 Diabetes Expo, Seattle Expo…………………………………....…………..143 6.8 Concluding remarks .......................................................................................149 Chapter 7: General Description of Interviews .................................................................152 7.1 Work and patterns of social connection .........................................................157 7.2 The course of diabetes ...................................................................................161 7.3 Race/ethnicity/geography ..............................................................................163 7.4 Marriage and gender ......................................................................................164 7.5 The safety net of SSDI ...................................................................................166 7.6 Complimentary Alternative Medicine (CAM) and digital data trackers .......168 7.7 Patterns of control ..........................................................................................174                                                                                                                                                                        iii 7.8 Concluding remarks .......................................................................................178 Chapter 8: Just Beginning ................................................................................................180 8.1 Disconnecting body from self: Laura’s story .................................................183 8.2 The power of food: Cedric’s story .................................................................195 8.3 The power of food: Susan’s story ..................................................................119 8.4 Giving responsibility to technology: Jerry’s story .........................................202 8.5 Re-defining self and self-care: Marie’s story .................................................206 8.6 Diabetes isn’t real life: Ima’s story ................................................................209 8.7 Concluding remarks .......................................................................................211 Chapter 9: Still Learning/Flux .........................................................................................213 9.1 Bouncing between extremes: Steve’s story ...................................................214 9.2 Contemplation as a double-edged sword: Rick’s story ..................................221 9.3 The bureaucracy of safety-net assistance: Earl’s story ..................................224 9.4 Discovering control: Jane’s story ...................................................................229 Chapter 10: Care of the Self .............................................................................................238 10.1 Finding pieces to a puzzle: Marie’s story ....................................................241 10.2 An American success story: Luis’ story ......................................................253 10.3 A lifetime of self-discipline: Sara’s story ....................................................258 10.4 The roles of medication and concluding remarks ........................................263 Chapter 11: Spirituality, Reciprocity and the Ethics of Self-care ....................................265 11.1 Spirituality....................................................................................................265 11.2 Volunteering and reciprocity .......................................................................273 11.3 Concluding remarks .....................................................................................277 Chapter 12: Affordable Care Act Coda ...........................................................................281 12.1 Self-objectification and self-care .................................................................283 12.2 Simplification, exclusion and power ............................................................285 Chapter 13: Conclusion ....................................................................................................291 References ........................................................................................................................301                                                                                                                                                                        iv Appendix 1 .......................................................................................................................319 Appendix 2 .......................................................................................................................320 Appendix 3 .......................................................................................................................321 Appendix 4 .......................................................................................................................322 Appendix 5 .......................................................................................................................323                                                                                                                                                                          v List of Figures Figure 3.1: Tacoma! Gateway to Health! ..........................................................................53 Figure 3.2: “Looking up 11th Street” Downtown Tacoma, 1907 .......................................64 Figure 3.3: Wheeler-Osgood plant, circa 1927 ..................................................................68                                                                                                                                                                        vi Acknowledgements This dissertation began decades before any fieldwork or writing took place, and so, to acknowledge all of the help, insights, discussions and encouragement that has occurred over that period would be impossible. However, I would like to try and acknowledge the people who stand out in my mind now, thirty years after first becoming aware of the life-threatening consequences of poorly controlled type-2 diabetes as a pharmacy student. Over this period, the people I’ve encountered living with type-2 diabetes have been my most significant teachers. In particular, I’d like to thank Ida for all of her insights of living with type-2 diabetes she has shared with me over the decades of our acquaintance. I would also like to thank my professors at Southern Methodist University, Carolyn Smith-Morris, Caroline Brettell and Vickie Lockwood, for guiding me through the first years of anthropology training and this project. At Washington University, in addition to the support of Anthropology Department faculty and members of my committee, Carolyn Sargent has been an integral part of this project from its beginning at SMU. In addition, I am most grateful for Jennie Joe’s help at the beginning stages of this project and fieldwork and her sustained interest continuing to its end. Finally, the completion of this dissertation would not have been possible without the weekly meetings, support and particularly the direction to just “keep writing” from my advisor, Rebecca Lester. Whatever shortcomings exist in the arguments of this dissertation are my own responsibility and not from her lack of identifying them in thorough draft readings. My thanks also go to a number of people outside of anthropology, whose involvement facilitated my fieldwork and the writing process. Janet Runbeck’s energy and ability to network,                                                                                                                                                                        vii organize and follow through on a project is still a source of awe to me. She provided not only a fieldwork site in Tacoma, WA, but also a template of how to realize a needed community service despite being told “that can’t be done.” In addition, her willingness and interest to discuss all manner of world, medical and personal issues provided much needed support during fieldwork. Ruth Berson, at the Writing Center of Washington University provided a different, but equally essential, template for student engagement and support provided during the final months of writing. This dissertation could not have been completed without her critique, colored pens and metaphors as to how to frame an argument. I cannot thank her enough for sharing her writing expertise. I also owe a special thanks to Quynh-Chi Duong, pharmacist extraordinaire, for helping me negotiate the vagaries of graduate school and for our long discussions about the nature of clinical work and diabetes treatment. Last and not least, one of the unexpected benefits of graduate school was that it made me appreciate the depth of my father’s self-taught knowledge of philosophy and social theory. My father’s passing, right as I began fieldwork, has made me grateful for what I was able to learn from him, but also acutely aware of his absence, as someone not only knowledgeable but always ready to take an interest in the details of my project. I hope this dissertation comes at least close to his insightful way of understanding the world. Jenny Epstein Washington University in St. Louis December 2016                                                                                                                                                                        viii Chapter 1: Introduction Urban, industrialized space usually evokes images of a built environment that is intensely human-made, of people living in close proximity and yet also isolated and anonymous. One doesn’t immediately think of how the space and routines of daily urban life and human biologies are closely intertwined or how urban life shapes the ways people take care of themselves and each other. Yet these were the unexpected and profound connections I encountered among residents of Tacoma, WA, living with type-2 diabetes. Closely interwoven into the routines of daily life were loss and disenfranchisement, abstraction and alienation that brought into sharp relief how little value was placed on caring for one’s health. Under the guise of changing simple, daily routines were intense struggles to break the powerful hold of what was familiar and known, and particularly, to find new meanings that made it worth the effort. How social spaces are conceived, particularly the space of human bodies in urban settings is the underlying dimension that links past and present, the local and universal to the ongoing narratives of progress and development in this project. Rick’s story of diabetes is one of struggle to regain a sense of place in the world and to find new reasons to care for his health. “I’m blue-collar, I was busting my ass all my life. It’s hard mentally, how to get back in.” Two years before I met Rick, he had lost his sawmill job of 30 years when X Corporation declared bankruptcy. “We all lost our jobs, we were all laid off. They went broke; they said they had no money. Everyone lost their pensions, retirement. They took it all away. There was no recourse. I mean they just packed up corporate headquarters in                                                                                                                                                                        1

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Epstein, Jenny, "The Violence of Abstraction: Learning to Live With Type-2 Diabetes in Everyday Life" (2016). Arts & has also been the focus of the work of sociologist and philosopher Henri Lefebvre (1901-1991). Given Lefebvre's alternate understanding of bodies as a site of both discipline and.
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.