Natural Hegemonies: Sleep and the Rhythms of American Capitalism. Anthropology of Consciousness 24.2: 96-116. Where Have All Our Naps Gone?, Or, Nathaniel Kleitman, the Eclipse of Napping, and the Historiography of Emergence. What’s So Natural About Sleep? Anthropology Now 5.3: 9-17. Therapy, Remedy, Cure: Disorder and the Spatiotemporality of Medicine and Everyday Life. Science as Culture 24.2: 205-226.ĭisclosure as Method, Disclosure as Dilemma In Disclosure in Health and Illness, edited by Lenore Manderson and Mark Davis. Myths of Modern American Sleep: Naturalizing Primordial Sleep, Blaming Technological Distractions, and Pathologizing Children. Medical Anthropology 36.2 : 83-95.Ĭan we Ever Know the Sleep of Our Ancestors? Sleep Health 2.1: 4-5.īiomedicine, the Whiteness of Sleep and the Wages of Spatiotemporal Normativity. Chronic Subjunctivity, Or, How Physicians Use Diabetes and Insomnia to Manage Futures in the United States. “Human Nature” and the Biology of Everyday Life. Multibiologism: An Anthropological and Bioethical Framework for Moving Beyond Medicalization. In addition to the book, there are a number of articles related to sleep, most of which aren’t integrated into the book (although small snippets are). My first book-length project (which was my dissertation at the University of Minnesota) was on American sleep from the 19th through the turn of the 21st century, which all came together in The Slumbering Masses: Sleep, Medicine, and American Everyday Life.
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