This year鈥檚 will feature medical anthropologist , associate professor of anthropology in the 麻豆视频 & 麻豆视频, speaking on "Healing in a Toxic World: Reimagining the Times and Spaces of the Therapeutic."
The lecture, scheduled for 5-6:30 p.m. Nov. 11 in the Guerlac Room at the A.D. White House, is free and open to the public.
鈥淲orking at the intersection of medicine, therapy, economy and questions of knowledge sovereignty, Stacey鈥檚 work has reached across many scholarly domains," said , professor of history and Taylor Family Director of the Society for the Humanities (A&S), adding that Langwick took courses in intellectual property law and plant biology in order to research her new book.
Langwick said her lecture will draw on the story of a banana in Tanzania called kitarasa, which 鈥渉as emerged as a key player in both entrepreneurial and nongovernmental experiments striving to heal bodies and soils in a world where that which enables survival in the near term, undermines it for future generations.鈥
Dorkia Enterprises, a small Tanzanian business, is working to commercialize kitarasa flour as a 鈥渢herapeutic鈥 food, a process that is revealing tensions between the economic and the ecological, she said. 鈥淎s this charismatic banana folds the scales of bodies and lands into one another, it incites the theorizing of relations among toxicity, healing and memory.鈥
Langwick鈥檚 latest book 鈥淢edicines That Feed Us,鈥 is forthcoming in 2026. She is also the author of 鈥淏odies, Politics and African Healing: The Matter of Maladies in Tanzania鈥 (2011) and co-editor of 鈥淢edicine, Mobility and Power in Global Africa鈥 (2012). She co-leads a collaborative international design project, 鈥淯zima: Wellness,鈥 focused on healing on and of the planet in the face of climate change. The project has a teaching, research and healing garden at a major teaching-research hospital in Tanzania, which is used as a site of medical training, together with the hospital鈥檚 clinic, classroom and laboratory. Langwick teaches classes on medicine and healing, the body and bodiliness, toxicity, postcolonial science, critical plant studies and anthropological methods.
The Annual Invitational Lecture is designed to give a Cornell audience a chance to hear a distinguished Cornell humanities faculty member who may frequently speak at other universities, but whom we seldom have the privilege of hearing.