Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

      • Lawrence Cohen is a professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Department of South & Southeast Asian Studies. He is a cultural anthropologist whose primary field is the critical study of medicine, health, and the body.
      vcresearch.berkeley.edu/faculty/lawrence-cohen
  1. People also ask

  2. Lawrence Cohen is a professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Department of South & Southeast Asian Studies. He is a cultural anthropologist whose primary field is the critical study of medicine, health, and the body.

  3. Lawrence Cohen is a Professor in Anthropology and South and Southeast Asian Studies and the co-director of the Medical Anthropology Program. His research in South Asia has included the following: aging, postcoloniality, and rhetorics of family decline; Ayurveda and its contemporary transformations; the popular folklore of Ganesh; and AIDS ...

  4. Current Work. My current work is on large genealogical platforms and on the discovery of unknown kin as a. mode of relatedness, with attention in particular to how kinship was digitized and monetized before the advent of genetic relatedness platforms.

  5. Articles 1–20. ‪Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley‬ - ‪‪Cited by 4,363‬‬.

  6. LAWRENCE COHEN — Curriculum Vitae 2009 415-987-8937 (cell), 415-587-8647 (home), cohen@berkeley.edu EDUCATION 1983 A.B. s. c. l., Religion, Harvard. Detur, Hoopes Prizes. Phi Beta Kappa. 1992 A.M. Anthropology, Harvard University. 1992 Ph.D. Anthropology, Harvard University. Prize for Excellence in Teaching. PROFESSIONAL

  7. Professor. Department: Anthropology. South and Southeast Asian Studies. Bio/CV: My current work is on large genealogical platforms and on the discovery of unknown kin as a mode of relatedness, with attention in particular to how kinship was digitized and monetized before the advent of genetic relatedness platforms.

  8. Lawrence Cohen is a scholar of religion and a medical anthropologist. Much of his work has focused on the norms and forms of political life in India, attending to questions of old age and the place of the family in the decolonization of knowledge; to the sexual and gendered logics of "backwardness"; and to the mediation and regulation of ...