Laura Stark
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Accounting for Esther Smucker
The Mennonite church, the US National Institutes of Health, and the trade in healthy bodies, 1950–70
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Accounting shapes the epistemic possibilities of medical knowledge – and shows how practices seemingly ancillary to bioscience can alter both organisational and human bodies, as well as the available ways for living in each. From the 1950s through 1990s, members of Anabaptist churches, who joined ‘voluntary service’ programmes, were able to ‘volunteer’ as Normal Control human subjects at the US National Institutes of Health. Each group had a ‘unit leader,’ who worked informally as the churches’ local account. As documented in traditional archives and in a publicly available ‘vernacular archive’, Anabaptists were both accounting and being accounted for. First, Mennonites appeared literally in the legers of NIH. They were essential research materials whose time the government purchased for a given price. Accounting practices helped NIH and the Anabaptist churches temporarily to align their missions, which had the structural effect of allowing a moral market in healthy civilian bodies to emerge. Second, Anabaptists were enrolled at NIH in experiments, including studies of metabolism, for which bodies were seen as in vivo accounts through which scientists could record input and output. As a mode of attention in metabolic medicine, accounting clarifies when and how categories such as age, gender, and race, were made real and they reinforced shared social biases. Third, Anabaptists were doing the physical labour of bookkeeping at NIH. Their labour of accounting, and the practices of peer surveillance and discipline it required, enforced the embodied discipline that clinical researchers capitalised upon without needing to assert directly.

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Accounting for health

Calculation, paperwork, and medicine, 1500–2000

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