Remaking the post ‘human’: a productive problem for health sociology (Editorial)

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McLeod, K
Fullagar, S
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2021
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Abstract

We start by acknowledging we are writing on the unceded lands of the palawa and pakana peoples of lutrawita (Tasmania), and the Yugambeh and Kombumerri peoples. This is important because contemporary sociological paradigms such as posthumanism, the subject of this editorial, sometimes overlook how the politics of colonisation continues to shape academic knowledge production (which this editorial goes on to discuss).

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Health Sociology Review

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This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Health Sociology Review, 31 Oct 2021, copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14461242.2021.1990710

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Subject

Health equity

Sociology of health

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultural determinants of health

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McLeod, K; Fullagar, S, Remaking the post ‘human’: a productive problem for health sociology (Editorial), Health Sociology Review, 2021