Social practice theory and public health: microbes, bodies and environments

It is widely recognised that biological, microbial and social processes interact. Behind this headline there is much less agreement about how the social world should be conceptualised and understood. One response is that practices – not social structures, and not individual behaviours – constitute the ‘site’ of the social. In recent years,
practice theorists have generated a distinctive and powerful repertoire of ideas about materiality, inequality and global change. The result is an inspiring and generative body of social theory that provides the basis for interdisciplinary alliances and for new ways of thinking about the social dynamics of microbiomes.

Cecily Maller (RMIT), Simon Cohn (LSHTM) and Elizabeth Shove (Lancaster) are organising a series of seminars in which invited participants and contributors discuss papers that deal with related issues.

27th March 2024, 9am. Catherine Will, (2016) On difference and doubt as tools for critical engagement with public health. Critical Public Health, 27 (3). pp. 293-302.
24th April 2024, 9am. Steve Hinchliffe (2022) Postcolonial Global Health, Post-Colony Microbes and Antimicrobial Resistance,Theory, culture & society 2022 Vol. 39 Issue 3 Pages 145-168
29th May 2024, 9am. Beth Greenhough et al.(2018) Unsettling antibiosis: how might interdisciplinary researchers generate a feeling for the microbiome and to what effect?Palgrave communications  Vol. 4 Issue 1 Pages 149.
26 June 2024, 9am. Jamie Lorimer, (2016) Gut Buddies: Multispecies Studies and the Microbiome, Environmental Humanities Vol. 8 Issue 1 Pages 57-76
24th July 2024, 9am. Cecily Maller and Maurizio Meloni (2024) Revitalizing Air: More-than-Human Relations in Urban Health Beyond the Modern-Premodern Binary, GeoHumanities.
25th September 2024, 9am. Elizabeth Shove, Stan Blue and Mike Kelly, (2024), Categorising and cohabiting: practices as the site of biosocial becoming, Social Theory & Health

We have added three more sessions focusing on selected readings that have to do with theories of practice.

23rd October 2024, 9am. Introduction to The Nexus of Practices: Connections, Constellations, Practitioners, edited by Allison Hui, Ted Schatzki and Elizabeth Shove.  2017. Routldege.

20th November 2024, 9am. Ted Schatzki, ‘Keeping Track of Large Phenomena’ 2016, Geographische Zeitschrift  Vol. 104 Issue 1 Pages 4-24, https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/fsv/gz/2016/00000104/00000001/art00002

11th December 2024, 9am. Stanley Blue and Nicola Spurling, 2017, ‘Qualities of connective tissue in hospital life: how complexes of practices change’ in The Nexus of Practices, edited by A. Hui, T. Schatzki and E. Shove

 

A starter pack of a few other readings relating to practice theory

Reckwitz, A. (2002 )Toward a Theory of Social Practices: A Development in Culturalist Theorizing, European Journal of Social Theory 2002 Vol. 5 Issue 2 Pages 243-263
DOI: 10.1177/13684310222225432
A very widely cited starting point that locates practice theory in the wider field of social theory and that identifies some key features, including the central role of the material world.

Shove, E. (2010) ‘Beyond the ABC: climate change policy and theories of social change’ Environment and Planning A 2010 Vol. 42 Issue 6 Pages 1273-1285
Not officially rooted in practice theory, but this is a strong critique of the focus on individual behaviour. 

It was responded to (negatively) by Lorraine Whitmarsh and colleagues.
L. Whitmarsh, S. O’Neill and I. Lorenzoni, 2011, ‘Climate change or social change? Debate within, amongst, and beyond disciplines’ Environment and Planning A 2011 Vol. 43 Issue 2 Pages 258-261
to which there is a response;
Shove, E. 2011, ‘On the difference between chalk and cheese?a response to Whitmarsh et al’s comments on “Beyond the ABC: climate change policy and theories of social change”‘ Environment and Planning A 2011 Vol. 43 Issue 2 Pages 262-264

.. more suggestions welcome.