Jessica Hardin
Associate Professor
Jessica Hardin
Associate Professor
Bio
I am a cultural and medical anthropologist who is interested in how the intersection of medicine and religion shapes lived experiences of chronic illness. Focusing on metabolic disorders, my research bridges critical medical anthropology (on nutrition, fat, metabolic disorders) and the anthropology of Christianity (on the body, healing, denomination). As a result, both my research and teaching are committed to illuminating how structural inequalities operate in everyday life. I draw from feminist methodologies in my work and in the classroom to investigate how macro-level change influences everyday life.
My long-term fieldwork, conducted in Samoa from 2011 to 2012, supported by the Wenner Gren Foundation, built on over a year of preliminary research, and language training supported by a Fulbright-Hays grant, in the islands (Samoa and American Samoa) and diaspora (Hawai’i and California). My book project, which highlights several voices including health professionals, pastors and their families, healers, and Pentecostal individuals suffering with metabolic illness, offers a revision to scholarly understandings of the medicalization of food, fat, and fitness from the perspective of Pentecostal Christians in Samoa. I explore how they translate health risks associated with metabolic disorders into moral risks associated with living a good religious life.
I received my PhD in Anthropology from Brandeis University in 2014, and now I am an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Rochester Institute of Technology.
Select Scholarship
RECENT PUBLICATIONS
Books
2021 SturtzSreetharan, Cindi, Alexandra Brewis, Jessica Hardin, Sarah Trainer and Amber Wutich. Fat in Four Cultures: A Global Ethnography of Weight in Samoa, Paraguay, Japan and the US. “Teaching Culture” series. Toronto, CA: University of Toronto Press.
2019 Faith and the Pursuit of Health: Cardiometabolic Disorders in Samoa. “Health, Inequality, and Social Justice” series. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Peer Reviewed Journal Articles
Forthcoming. Trainer, Sarah, Cindi SturtzSreetharan, Amber Wutich, Alexandra Brewis and Jessica Hardin. “Fat is all my fault: Globalized metathemes of body self-blame.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly.
2021 Hardin, Jessica. “Life before Vegetables: Nutrition, Cash and Subjunctive Health in Samoa.”Cultural Anthropology 36(3): 428–457.
2021 Wutich, Amber, Cindi SturtzSreetharan, Sarah Trainer, Jessica Hardin, Alex Brewis. “Metatheme analysis: A qualitative approach to comparative and multi-sited research.” International Journal of Social Research Methods 20: 1-11.
2020 “Ceaseless Healing and Never-Natural Disaster.” Vital Topics Forum: “Chronic Disaster Reimagining Noncommunicable Disease.” American Anthropologist 122(3): 650-651.
2020 Trainer, Sarah, Jessica Hardin, Cindi SturtzSreetharan, Alex Brewis. “Worry-nostalgia: Anxieties around the fading of local cuisines and foodways.” Gastronomica 20(2): 67-78.
2019 “’It’s almost like paying for praying’: Giving Critiques and the Discursive Management of Denominational Difference.” Anthropological Quarterly 92(4): 1099-1122. Special issue: “Institutions, Infrastructures, and Religious Sociality,” edited by Courtney Handman and Minna Opas.
2019 Garth, Hanna and Jessica Hardin. “On the Limitations of Barriers: Social Visibility, Fear of Consequences and Weight Management in Cuba and Samoa.” Social Science & Medicine (239). Doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112501
2019 Hardin, Jessica and Christina Ting Kwauk. “Elemental Eating: Samoan Public Health and Valuation.” The Contemporary Pacific 31(2): 381-415.
2019 “’Father Released Me’: Accelerating Care, Temporal Repair, and Ritualized Friendship among Pentecostal Women in Samoa.” American Ethnologist 46(2): 150-161.
Currently Teaching
In the News
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October 14, 2020
NSF grant awarded to help RIT research diabetes in Samoa
Jessica Hardin, an assistant professor of anthropology, will be traveling to the South Pacific independent nation of Samoa to study how Samoan people make decisions about how to treat diabetes.