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Introduction

0:00

The metabolic turn

6:47

Why study metabolism

13:14

Metabolic compartmentalization

19:00

Cell compartmentalization

23:09

Biofilms

24:30

Allergic reactions

33:30

Integrity of compartmentalization

36:02

Shift work

37:08

Hallmark of Health

38:01

Worlds Largest bacterium

38:51

Herbicide Resistance

39:25

Sequestration

40:09

Does it give you a different frame

41:35

Industrialization of metabolism

42:23

Mass production of enzymes

43:37

Food industry

46:44

Continuous process manufacturing

47:08

Sugar manufacturing

47:31

National Biscuit Company

48:46

Historical Reflexivity

50:19

Conclusion

52:35

Questions

55:35
WCCEH Annual Public Lecture: Metabolism is Not a Metaphor
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2023Jul 5
The University of Exeter's Wellcome Centre for Cultures & Environments of Health in conjunction with The Centre for the Study of Life Sciences (Egenis) presents its 2023 Annual Lecture. Epidemics of metabolic diseases are a major global challenge. Understanding how colonial histories, economic inequalities and post-industrial ways of living intersect to produce ill-health is a truly interdisciplinary task. To make progress on how to sustain health in the face of metabolic injustice, we need to bring together expertise from across the medical humanities, social sciences and biomedicine. Research at the Wellcome Centre for Cultures & Environments of Health and beyond has begun to map out the work needed to integrate diverse kinds of knowledge - from lived experience, epidemiology, history, anthropology, law and many other disciplines – to work towards metabolic justice. We are thrilled that this year’s WCCEH Annual Lecture, hosted in collaboration with Egenis, will be given by Professor Hannah Landecker (UCLA), author of "Culturing Life: How Cells Became Technologies" (2007, Harvard UP). Her work has been foundational to this emerging field, and inspirational for transdisciplinary thinking. Professer Landecker is an historian and sociologist of the life sciences. She holds a joint appointment in the Life and Social Sciences at UCLA, where she is a Professor in the Sociology Department, and the Institute for Society and Genetics, an interdisciplinary unit at UCLA committed to cultivating research and pedagogy at the interface of the life and human sciences. She co-directs the Center for Reproductive Science, Health and Education at UCLA. Recent work has focused on the social and biological problem of antimicrobial resistance, histories of metabolism and metabolic disorder, and the turn to proteins in biotechnology.

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Exeter CCEH

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