Knihobot

Frederic Keck

    Frédéric Keck je přední francouzský antropolog, jehož práce se zaměřuje na studium epidemií a jejich dopadu na společnost. Jako vedoucí výzkumný pracovník v CNRS a ředitel Laboratoře sociální antropologie v Paříži přispívá k hlubšímu porozumění lidským reakcím na zdravotní krize. Jeho publikace, včetně spoluautorství v knize zabývající se antropologií epidemií, nabízejí cenné poznatky o komplexních vztazích mezi lidmi, nemocemi a společenskými strukturami. Keckův výzkum zdůrazňuje kulturní a sociální dimenze epidemií a osvětluje, jak tyto události formují naše životy.

    How French Moderns Think
    Avian Reservoirs
    • 2024

      This book traces the contributions of the Lévy-Bruhl family to social and political thought and expertise in 20th-century France, shaping the anticipation of economic and health crises. How French Moderns Think tells the story of the French sociological tradition through four generations of the Lévy-Bruhl family: Lucien, who founded the Institute of Ethnology at the University of Paris; his son Henri, who founded the Institute of Roman Law; his grandson Raymond, who took part in the creation of the National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies; and his great-grandson Daniel, a vaccine specialist at the Institute of Public Health. This family history casts a new light on the philosophical debates about “primitive mentality” and the “savage mind.” By drawing on the expert knowledge inherent in this family genealogy, the articulation between the logical and the “pre-logical” is not a cognitive question but rather a problem of anticipating unpredictable events. By relating Lévy-Bruhl’s engagements from the Dreyfus Affair to the Minister of Armaments during the First World War, Keck narrates the confrontation of the socialist ideal of justice and truth with the French colonial experience and its transformations in global technologies preparing for pandemics.

      How French Moderns Think
    • 2020

      Frederic Keck traces how the anticipation of bird flu pandemics has changed relations between birds and humans in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan, showing that humans' reliance on birds is key to mitigating future pandemics.

      Avian Reservoirs