In this talk, James Doucet-Battle of the University of California, Santa Cruz, draws from his recent book, "Sweetness in the Blood: Race, Risk, and Type 2 Diabetes'' (Minnesota, 2021), to highlight the bioethical intersections of race and gender in Type 2 diabetes research recruitment. Through the raced and gendered lens of HeLa and the case of Henrietta Lacks, Doucet-Battle links HeLa's salience to diabetes research with its problematic relevance to contemporary genomic science. Framing this discussion within a larger historical interrogation of the "social death" (Patterson) of "slavery and its afterlives" (Hartman), Doucet-Battle outlines his current project that counterpoises the research desire to gather sub-Saharan genomic diversity with ethno-nationalist resistance to diversity as a sociopolitical project. [September 12, 2022]
The James Weldon Johnson Institute for the Study of Race and Difference supports research, teaching, and public dialogue that examine race and intersecting dimensions of human difference including but not limited to class, gender, religion, and sexuality.
http://www.jamesweldonjohnson.emory.edu
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