Carcinogenic residues of global biomedicine in Senegal
Join this STS Research Seminar with Dr Noémi Tousignant, Lecturer in Science and Technology Studies at UCL Department of Science and Technology Studies.
Dr Noémi Tousignant will host this STS Research Seminar. The event will consist of a live online talk (40 minutes), followed by a Q&A session. To receive the joining instructions, please email sts@ucl.ac.uk.
In the early 1950s, academic clinicians in Dakar began investigating the puzzlingly high number of fatal liver cirrhosis and cancer cases they saw on hospital wards. More than half a century later, Senegalese are still dying of liver damage. In the intervening decades, biomedical and agronomic scientists defined the main causes of these deaths – namely, chronic hepatitis B infection and the consumption of aflatoxin, the metabolite of a fungal crop contaminant – and developed technologies for their control including vaccines, drugs, diagnostic and regulatory testing and detoxification. In this talk, I consider how to narrate the persistence of Senegalese liver disease and deaths as part of a global history of technoscientific progress, failure and inequality. Describing how Senegalese persons, tissues, institutions and crops have been implicated in generating liver cancer knowledge and protection, I argue that ongoing West African hepatic/carcinogenic susceptibilities and exposures can be conceptualised as residues of global biomedicine.
Lecturer in Science and Technology Studies
UCL Department of Science and Technology Studies
Further information
Ticketing
Open
Cost
Free
Open to
UCL staff