ABSTRACT

This book sets out to define and consolidate the field of bioinformation studies in its transnational and global dimensions, drawing on debates in science and technology studies, anthropology and sociology. It provides situated analyses of bioinformation journeys across domains and spheres of interpretation. As unprecedented amounts of data relating to biological processes and lives are collected, aggregated, traded and exchanged, infrastructural systems and machine learners produce real consequences as they turn indeterminate data into actionable decisions for states, companies, scientific researchers and consumers. Bioinformation accrues multiple values as it transverses multiple registers and domains, and as it is transformed from bodies to becoming a subject of analysis tied to particular social relations, promises, desires and futures. The volume harnesses the anthropological sensibility for situated, fine-grained, ethnographically grounded analysis to develop an interdisciplinary dialogue on the conceptual, political, social and ethical dimensions posed by bioinformation.

chapter 1|19 pages

Bioinformation worlds and futures

An introduction
ByEJ Gonzalez-Polledo, Silvia Posocco

chapter 2|16 pages

All the data creatures

ByTahani Nadim

chapter 3|18 pages

Capturing genomes

The friction and flow of bioinformation at the Smithsonian
ByAdrian Van Allen

chapter 4|21 pages

The kinship of bioinformation 1

Relations in an evolving archive
ByResto Cruz, Penny Tinkler, Laura Fenton

chapter 5|18 pages

Bioinformation in formation

Inventing medical devices in contemporary India
ByAnisha Chadha

chapter 6|18 pages

Top_to_toe.ods

Bioinformation and the politics of rape response
BySylvia McKelvie

chapter 7|19 pages

American bioinformation and U.S. race politics

The values of diverse genetic data
ByAnna Jabloner

chapter 9|17 pages

Seeing like an airport

Towards interoperability in contemporary security
ByMark Maguire, Eileen Murphy

chapter 10|18 pages

Surrender

(Bio)information in the era of the pandemic in South Korea
ByKiheung Kim, Jongmi Kim

chapter |6 pages

Afterword

Data, life and worlds in an anthropology of bioinformation
ByNoah Tamarkin