P. Sean Brotherton
Dr. P. Sean Brotherton is Professor of Anthropology at New York University. He is a cultural anthropologist who studies and theorizes health, medicine, the state, subjectivity, and psychoanalysis. Brotherton’s research intervenes in debates of medical anthropology, the anthropology of the body, and Latin American and Caribbean studies. Across his work, he asks: What constitutes health or well-being, or the notion of a healthy subject, to whom does it matter, and why?
Over the past two decades, his overarching research questions have sought to weave historical, epistemological, and ethnographic modes of analysis into a theoretical approach that he calls a ‘genealogy of individual bodily practices.’ Within this framework, he examines the sometimes contradictory and overlapping relationships among quotidian individual practices, economic reform, and state power. This approach helps unravel the multiple historical layers that contribute to bodily formations, both culturally and materially, and allows scholars to critically examine the lived experience of bodies. His first book, Revolutionary Medicine: Health and the Body in Post-Soviet Cuba (Duke University Press, 2012), employs this analytical lens to analyze how different sociopolitical fields create and transform political subjectivities. It urges scholars to delve into the nebulous field of embodiment, asking pointed questions about how subjects respond, enact, and rearticulate ideological assumptions in their everyday practices.
Currently under contract at Duke University Press, his second monograph, Global Health, Otherwise: Cuba and the Politics of Humanitarianism, examines the absent-presence of Cuba’s international solidarity humanitarian efforts as a non-event in the contemporary global health landscape. Under the umbrella of solidarity missions, Cuba has dispatched tens of thousands of medical brigades to geographically diverse locales since the early 1960s. In scope, depth, and breadth, the magnitude of this brand of humanitarianism far outpaces the most iconic faces of the contemporary global health industry, such as Doctors Without Borders, the Red Cross, or UNICEF. Despite these efforts, Cuba’s quest for global health equity occupies the margin, or the subaltern, in the global health landscape, even for a field that uncritically celebrates quantitative metrics. Cuba is the so-called alternative or exception in mainstream debates about global health equity. What, then, are the structuring logics shaping global health’s dominant script—that is, the problematics, concepts, methods, and practices—that render different imaginaries of care and aid as illegible and thus unthinkable?
Another project underway, Armed Against Unhappiness: Psychoanalytic Grammars in Buenos Aires, explores how psychoanalysis has produced an ensemble of institutions, expertise, procedures, and practices. Through this, psychic life has become a legible and actionable site of intervention, dislocation, and struggle. Brotherton examines how diverse psychoanalytic communities in Buenos Aires have produced distinctive grammar(s) that influence how individuals articulate ideas about health and well-being. Through detailed case studies, he explains how these grammars, deictic expressions of/for the unconscious, are deployed, reworked, and embodied in everyday interactions. This work highlights how social and political experiences enmesh psychic life.
Before joining NYU, Brotherton was an Associate Professor of Anthropology and the College at the University of Chicago and an Associate Professor at Yale University. He is the President (2023-25) of the Society for Medical Anthropology (SMA), a section within the American Anthropological Association (AAA).
Address: New York University
Department of Anthropology
Rufus D. Smith Hall
25 Waverly Pl, New York, NY 10003
Over the past two decades, his overarching research questions have sought to weave historical, epistemological, and ethnographic modes of analysis into a theoretical approach that he calls a ‘genealogy of individual bodily practices.’ Within this framework, he examines the sometimes contradictory and overlapping relationships among quotidian individual practices, economic reform, and state power. This approach helps unravel the multiple historical layers that contribute to bodily formations, both culturally and materially, and allows scholars to critically examine the lived experience of bodies. His first book, Revolutionary Medicine: Health and the Body in Post-Soviet Cuba (Duke University Press, 2012), employs this analytical lens to analyze how different sociopolitical fields create and transform political subjectivities. It urges scholars to delve into the nebulous field of embodiment, asking pointed questions about how subjects respond, enact, and rearticulate ideological assumptions in their everyday practices.
Currently under contract at Duke University Press, his second monograph, Global Health, Otherwise: Cuba and the Politics of Humanitarianism, examines the absent-presence of Cuba’s international solidarity humanitarian efforts as a non-event in the contemporary global health landscape. Under the umbrella of solidarity missions, Cuba has dispatched tens of thousands of medical brigades to geographically diverse locales since the early 1960s. In scope, depth, and breadth, the magnitude of this brand of humanitarianism far outpaces the most iconic faces of the contemporary global health industry, such as Doctors Without Borders, the Red Cross, or UNICEF. Despite these efforts, Cuba’s quest for global health equity occupies the margin, or the subaltern, in the global health landscape, even for a field that uncritically celebrates quantitative metrics. Cuba is the so-called alternative or exception in mainstream debates about global health equity. What, then, are the structuring logics shaping global health’s dominant script—that is, the problematics, concepts, methods, and practices—that render different imaginaries of care and aid as illegible and thus unthinkable?
Another project underway, Armed Against Unhappiness: Psychoanalytic Grammars in Buenos Aires, explores how psychoanalysis has produced an ensemble of institutions, expertise, procedures, and practices. Through this, psychic life has become a legible and actionable site of intervention, dislocation, and struggle. Brotherton examines how diverse psychoanalytic communities in Buenos Aires have produced distinctive grammar(s) that influence how individuals articulate ideas about health and well-being. Through detailed case studies, he explains how these grammars, deictic expressions of/for the unconscious, are deployed, reworked, and embodied in everyday interactions. This work highlights how social and political experiences enmesh psychic life.
Before joining NYU, Brotherton was an Associate Professor of Anthropology and the College at the University of Chicago and an Associate Professor at Yale University. He is the President (2023-25) of the Society for Medical Anthropology (SMA), a section within the American Anthropological Association (AAA).
Address: New York University
Department of Anthropology
Rufus D. Smith Hall
25 Waverly Pl, New York, NY 10003
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