STS Circle at Harvard
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Susan Greenhalgh
Harvard, Anthropology

on

Obesity, Inc.? Fat Science and Policy in the People's Republic of China

Monday, April 21
12:15-2:00 pm
Room 100F, Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm, Today, Wednesday, April 16.

Abstract: In recent decades, the large corporation has acquired a sprawling 
role in social and political life. Corporate funding of science is now a fact 
of life, producing widespread concern in the West about the implications for 
public health and human well-being. One would expect such problems to be 
amplified in China, where a slimming-down state pursuing an economy-first 
growth strategy has constructed an environment highly friendly to Western 
corporations. In this informal presentation, anthropologist Susan Greenhalgh 
talks about her recent fieldwork on the science and policy of Chinese obesity, 
one byproduct of the nation’s rush to Western-style development. While sharing 
her empirical findings and theoretical reflections, she also tells a 
methodological tale about the dynamics of  anthropological field research on 
science-making in a country in the midst of constant, confounding flux. In this 
crazy-quilt kind of environment, where nothing is quite what it seems, how does 
one frame “a question,” define “the field,” locate “informants,” and respond to 
new, unexpected issues that emerge in the course of research? On returning 
“home,” how does one create a scholarly story to tell when the data refuse to 
triangulate, the relevant literature is scattered across multiple fields, and 
the stories from the field seem to proliferate without end?

Biography:  Susan Greenhalgh is Professor of Social Anthropology and John King 
and Wilma Cannon Fairbank Professor of Chinese Society at Harvard. Her projects 
have focused on the science and governance of human life in the fields of in 
biomedicine, population management, and public health. She is best known for 
her book Just One Child: Science and Policy in Deng’s China, which won the 2010 
Rachel Carson Prize of the Society for Social Studies of Science. More recently 
she has been studying the biopolitical workings and effects of the anti-obesity 
campaign, initially in the U.S. and now in China and the world at large.




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http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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