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Marketing Self-Care: From Femtech and Biohacking to Painmoons and Extreme Travel
Start Date: 4/14/2023Start Time: 12:30 PM
End Date: 4/14/2023End Time: 1:50 PM

Event Description

Self-care today is a highly lucrative industry, and co-optation, appropriation, and neoliberal optimization undergird contemporary self-care discourse and its associated market. Trends here target the enhancement of an “ancient” or “sacred” femininity, and feminine self-care is further associated with the idea of refueling oneself to be of better service to others. However, in its contemporary, westernized, and white feminized form, this type of care may be about being more efficient, effective, and better at caring for other people, but not necessarily about directly caring for or standing in solidarity with underserved populations or marginalized communities. Instead, “care” for women in the Global South becomes linked with improving the world economy and international relations, while care for those in the Global North looks more like wealthy white women rolling out business ventures and pampering themselves (and their nuclear families).

Join the Drexel Center for Science, Technology and Society for a lecture featuring Alyson K. Spurgas, PhD, associate professor of Sociology at Trinity College who will map out the history of competing self-care discourses and movements, juxtaposing today’s “selfcare moment” against its radical and abolitionist historical origins. One of the most paradoxical aspects of the contemporary iteration is that “community care” is promoted as good for the self—that is: doing social justice work, broadly construed, which emphasizes diversity, equity, inclusion, and even “intersectionality,” is understood as personally beneficial, which is ultimately put forward as the most important reason to do it. After examining the historical roots of self-care and interrogating contemporary fads as they pertain to health and wellness, Professor Spurgas will show how today’s market and industry are fully compatible with neoliberalism and the commodification of care and argue that they are rooted in a white liberal feminist political economic vision. Eradicating the concept of “self-care” completely may be one imperative step toward a more revolutionary formulation, wherein the part about care is recentered, while the part about self is de-centered.

Contact Information:
Name: Kristene Unsworth, PhD
Director, Center for Science, Technology and Society
Email: ku26@drexel.edu
Alyson K. Spurgas, associate professor of Sociology, Trinity College
Attachments For This Event:
    > Alyson K. Spurgas – lecture flyer
Location:
Drexel University
IDEA Lab
3401 Market Street, Suite 110
Audience:
  • Everyone

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