Bodies of knowledge: medical anthropology and interdisciplinarity

Medical anthropology at Oxford was intended to be a short-term departure from my first degree in chemical engineering, motivated by my desire to understand health and illness in the context of wider society rather than within the confines of the lab. Ultimately Oxford medical anthropology became som...

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Main Author: Potter, CM
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Anthropological Society of Oxford 2015
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author Potter, CM
author_facet Potter, CM
author_sort Potter, CM
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description Medical anthropology at Oxford was intended to be a short-term departure from my first degree in chemical engineering, motivated by my desire to understand health and illness in the context of wider society rather than within the confines of the lab. Ultimately Oxford medical anthropology became something much more significant for me: a journey into unknown intellectual waters that led me to redefine both my career path and my academic identity. After being part of the first MSc/MPhil cohort and completing doctoral research within the programme in 2007, I became a postdoctoral research officer within Oxford's Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity before serving as Departmental Lecturer in Medical Anthropology from 2008-2014. I now work within the Health Services Research Unit, part of Oxford's Medical Sciences Division, where I hope to contribute the insights of medical anthropology towards interdisciplinary research informing health practice and policy at the national level.
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spelling oxford-uuid:58814bab-75d9-41a4-a164-3b65c259dab42024-08-23T19:22:17ZBodies of knowledge: medical anthropology and interdisciplinarityJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:58814bab-75d9-41a4-a164-3b65c259dab4EnglishJASO_articles_32BulkUploadAnthropological Society of Oxford2015Potter, CMMedical anthropology at Oxford was intended to be a short-term departure from my first degree in chemical engineering, motivated by my desire to understand health and illness in the context of wider society rather than within the confines of the lab. Ultimately Oxford medical anthropology became something much more significant for me: a journey into unknown intellectual waters that led me to redefine both my career path and my academic identity. After being part of the first MSc/MPhil cohort and completing doctoral research within the programme in 2007, I became a postdoctoral research officer within Oxford's Unit for Biocultural Variation and Obesity before serving as Departmental Lecturer in Medical Anthropology from 2008-2014. I now work within the Health Services Research Unit, part of Oxford's Medical Sciences Division, where I hope to contribute the insights of medical anthropology towards interdisciplinary research informing health practice and policy at the national level.
spellingShingle Potter, CM
Bodies of knowledge: medical anthropology and interdisciplinarity
title Bodies of knowledge: medical anthropology and interdisciplinarity
title_full Bodies of knowledge: medical anthropology and interdisciplinarity
title_fullStr Bodies of knowledge: medical anthropology and interdisciplinarity
title_full_unstemmed Bodies of knowledge: medical anthropology and interdisciplinarity
title_short Bodies of knowledge: medical anthropology and interdisciplinarity
title_sort bodies of knowledge medical anthropology and interdisciplinarity
work_keys_str_mv AT pottercm bodiesofknowledgemedicalanthropologyandinterdisciplinarity