Necropolitics of Death in Neurodegeneration

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/33724
DOI: 10.1007/S11013-024-09855-7
ISSN: 1573-076X
ISSN: 0165-005X
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2024Department
NeurocienciasSource
Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, Vol. 48, Núm. 2, 2024, pp. 384-400Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases (ND) pose significant challenges for biomedicine in the twenty-first century, particularly considering the global demographic ageing and the subsequent increase in their prevalence. Characterized as progressive, chronic and debilitating, they often result in higher mortality rates compared with the general population. Research agendas and biomedical technologies are shaped by power relations, ultimately affecting patient wellbeing and care. Drawing on the concepts of bio- and necropolitics, introduced by philosophers Foucault and Mbembe, respectively, this perspective examines the interplay between the territoriality and governmentality around demographic ageing, ND and death, focussing on knowledge production as a dispositif of power by highlighting the marginal role that the phenomenon of mortality plays in the ND research landscape. We propose a shift into acknowledging the coloniality of knowledge and embracing its situatedness to attain knowledge ‘from death’, understood as an epistemic position from which novel approaches and practices could emerge.
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Death; Mortality; Necropolitics; Neurodegenerative diseasesCollections
- Artículos Científicos [11595]
- Artículos Científicos INIBICA [1046]
- Articulos Científicos Neurociencias [89]






