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Nama : Cikal Erlangga

NPM : 2216011019

Kelas : Reguler A

Tugas Academic Resource !

Topic : Sociology of health

Anthology :

“Such authors, including myself (Harrison 1996), have found this absencesurprising:
not only because of the ubiquity of visual images encountered ona day-to-day basis in a
wide variety of social contexts; but also because weuse visual skills and visual
resources as ‘taken-for-granted’ ways of being inthe world, even if such visual
dimensions may be translated into words. Inaddition, much of the routine work of
social actors in many different con-texts requires visualisation as a component of human
thinking and problemsolving (as witnessed in the many accounts of ‘doing’ science for
example).”

Wang C. (2002), HarrisonSeeing health and illness worlds – using visual methodologies
in a sociology of health and illness: a methodological reviewBarbara Harrison, 856 –
872. Retreived from https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1467-9566.00322

Journal Article :

“These ideasabout the production of visual images have found favour with a number
ofresearchers who wish their research relationships to be collaborative and tooffer
opportunities for subject empowerment. Developments in camera tech-nology, and new
possibilities for the storage (e.g. photographic archives onthe internet), analysis and
presentation of images and text, are available.CD-ROM technology and forms of multi-
media software which provide suchopportunities will also open up further questions, in
relation both to accessto resources and to the development of skills, for researchers
and perhapsparticipants too (Henley 1998).”

Wang C. (2002), HarrisonSeeing health and illness worlds – using visual methodologies
in a sociology of health and illness: a methodological reviewBarbara Harrison,.
Retreived from https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1467-9566.00322

Tesis:

In writing this thesis I have sought to revitalise the sociological understanding of the body, so
that we might see how bodies matter in new ways. With the title Vital Bodies I intended to
affirm the vitality of the body, but I also wanted to suggest that this thesis is as much about
living as it is about bodies. The work of listening to and writing about the vital organs,
processes, signs, capacities, and sensations of bodies has demanded a particular mode of
attention, and here again the idea of vitalism has proved useful, not as a method or a theory,
but as an imperative and an ethical system: an attitude that affirms the originality of life
(Greco 2009: 27).

Charlotte Bates (2011), Vital Bodies : A Visual Sociology of Health and Illness in Everyday
Life. 1 (2) 16-20. Retreived from
https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/6373/1/SOC_thesis_Bates_2011.pdf

Monograph :

This monograph builds on sociology of health and illness scholarship and expands
theanalytical lens to include the myriad ways old people interact with science and technology
tonegotiate health and illness. For elders, perceptions of health and illness may not be
limitedto acute illness experiences, but may include an everyday understanding of a changing
stateof health and wellbeing that is managed and made more tenable through the use of
multiple,assistive technologies and environmental design modifications. Old individuals may
rely on arange of everyday technologies such as stairway railings, phones, adjusted toilet
seats, andwalking aids to create safer spaces and maintain health and mobility.

Joyce kelly (2010), A Sociological Approach To Ageing, Technology And Health, 171– 180.
Retreived from https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/j.1467-9566.2009.01219.x

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