Publications

ARTICLES

Fullwiley, D. 2007 "Race and Genetics: Attempts to Define the Relationship," Biosocieties 2(2):221-237.

Fullwiley, D. 2007 "The Molecularization of Race: Institutionalizing Racial Difference in Pharmacogenetics Practice," Science as Culture 16(1):1-30.

Fullwiley, D. 2006 "Biosocial Suffering: Order and Illness in Urban West Africa," BioSocieties 1(4):421-438.

Fullwiley, D. 2004 "From Discriminate Biopower to Everyday Biopolitics: Views on Sickle cell Testing in Dakar," Medical Anthropology 23(2):157-194.

Fullwiley, D. 1998 "Race, biologie et maladie: la difficile oraganisation des patients atteints de drépanocytose aux Etats-Unis" (Race, Biology, and Illness: Barriers to Sickle Cell Patient Group Organization in the United States) Sciences Sociales et Santé 16(3): 129-157.

 

BOOK CHAPTERS

Fullwiley, D. 2004 "Contingences de la maladie: les politiques culturelles de la souffrance en regard du trait drépanocytaire AS au Senegal." (Contingencies of illness: the cultural politics of sickle cell trait suffering in Senegal) in Agnès Lainé (ed.) La drépanocytose: Regards croisés sur une maladie orpheline (Paris: Karthala). Pp. 243-277.

 

ARTICLES UNDER REVIEW/ IN PREPARATION

Anne Fausto-Sterling, Lundy Braun, Duana Fullwiley, Evelynn M. Hammonds, Alondra Nelson, William Quivers, Susan M. Reverby, & Alexandra Shields. "Racial categories in medical practice: How useful are they?" (under review).

Fullwiley, D. "The Biologistical Construction of Race." (Forthcoming, 2008 Social Studies of Science ).

 

BOOK CHAPTERS IN PREPARATION

Fullwiley, D. "The Molecularization of Race : US Health Institutions, Pharmacogenetics Practice and Public Science after the Genome" In Revisiting Race in a Genomic Age. (Studies in Medical Anthropology). Barbara A. Koenig, Sandra Soo-Jin Lee, and Sarah Richardson (eds). Rutgers University Press. (Forthcoming, 2007).

 

MONOGRAPHS IN PREPARATION

The Enculturated Gene: Making Sense of Sickle Cell Difference in Modern West Africa (forthcoming, Princeton University Press).

The Molecularization of Race: Markering Difference in American Genomic Science (research ongoing)