DSOC 3111

DSOC 3111

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2017-2018.

This course provides an introduction to the ways in which medical practice, the medical profession, and medical technology are embedded in society and culture. We will ask how medicine is connected to various sociocultural factors such as gender, social class, race, and administrative cultures. We will examine the rise of medical sociology as a discipline, the professionalization of medicine, and processes of medicalization and demedicalization. We will look at alternative medical practices and how they differ from and converge with the dominant medical paradigm. We will focus on the rise of medical technology in clinical practice with a special emphases on reproductive technologies. We will focus on the body as a site for medical knowledge, including the medicalization of sex differences, the effect of culture on nutrition, and eating disorders such as obesity and anorexia nervosa. We will also read various classic and contemporary texts that speak to the illness experience and the culture of surgeons, hospitals, and patients, and we will discuss various case studies in the social construction of physical and mental illness.

When Offered Spring.

Permission Note Not open to: freshmen.

Distribution Category (D-AG, SBA-AG)

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Choose one lecture and one discussion. Combined with: BSOC 3111SOC 3130STS 3111

  • 4 Credits Graded

  •  4507 DSOC 3111   LEC 001

  •  4508 DSOC 3111   DIS 201

  •  4509 DSOC 3111   DIS 202

  •  4510 DSOC 3111   DIS 203

  •  4572 DSOC 3111   DIS 204

  •  4573 DSOC 3111   DIS 205

  •  4574 DSOC 3111   DIS 206