Controlling Bacteria in a Post-antibiotic Era: Popular Ideas about Bacteria, Antibiotics, and the Immune System

Author:

Hansson Kristofer1ORCID,Irwin Rachel2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social Work, Malmö University

2. Department of Arts and Cultural Sciences, Lund University

Abstract

This article addresses people’s experiences with bacteria and the human body and examines the cultural meanings regarding concerns that society likely is running out of effective antibiotics. The empirical material comes from Sweden, and our analysis is framed through perspectives from the medical humanities. The interdisciplinary goal is to better understand the societal challenges of antibiotic resistance in the advent of a so-called post-antibiotic era. The study presents results from the “If antibiotics stop working” questionnaire which was distributed with the help of The Folklife Archives with the Scania Music Collections at Lund University. We argue that the concept of a post-antibiotic era can open a more imaginary way of thinking about what future relationships are possible if antibiotics were to lose their curative power.

Publisher

Open Library of the Humanities

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Cultural Studies

Reference56 articles.

1. Introduction: Self-care Translated into Practice;Alftberg, ÅsaKristofer Hansson;Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research,2012

2. Bernstein, Jay H. 2010: Folk concepts. New York: City University of New York (CUNY Academic Works), Publications and Research Kingsborough Community College, https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1014&context=kb_pubs (accessed December 6, 2020).

3. Too clean, or not too clean: The Hygiene Hypothesis and Home Hygiene;Bloomfield, Sally F.Rosalind Stanwell-SmithR.W.R CrevelJohn Pickup;Clinical & Experimental Allergy,2006

4. Brenthel, Adam & Kristofer Hansson 2017: The Post-antibiotic Era: Cultural and Social Perspectives on Globally Increasing Antibiotic Resistance. Working Papers in Medical Humanities 3(1): 1–41, https://journals.lub.lu.se/medhum/article/view/18068/17057 (accessed January 5, 2021).

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