Catherine Do Tan
Catherine Tan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Vassar. She holds a PhD in Sociology from Brandeis University, MA from Columbia University, and BA from University of California, San Diego.
Her research interests include: medical sociology, science knowledge & technology, social movements, and qualitative methods.
Her first book, Spaces on the Spectrum: How Autism Movements Resist Experts and Create Knowledge, published by Columbia University Press (January 2024). investigates two movements that take issue with mainstream understandings of Autism Spectrum Disorder. She argues that science and health movements are important spaces for the cultivation and preservation of contentious knowledge—knowledge that aims to challenge dominant experts and authority. Such spaces organize the resources necessary to transform ideas into lived realities. This study draws from over three years of ethnographic fieldwork and interviews with members of the alternative biomedical and autistic rights movements.
In addition, her other ongoing project is titled, “Healing power: Constructions of expertise and authority on the margins of medicine.” This ethnography follows healers working outside of conventional medicine, including naturopathic doctors, energy healers, and shamans in the United States. She examines how healers seek legitimacy, hone their practices, and position themselves in relation to both the medical establishment and the non-Western traditions that inspire their work.
Departments and Programs
Courses
SOCI 255 Medical Sociology
SOCI 374 Epidemic: Global Responses to Disease Outbreak and Public Health Crises
STS 255 Medical Sociology
STS 374 Epidemic: Global Responses to Disease Outbreak and Public Health Crises
Grants, Fellowships, Honors, Awards
Catherine Tan Publishes Spaces on the Spectrum: How Autism Movements Resist Experts and Create Knowledge
Catherine Tan, Assistant Professor of Sociology, is author of Spaces on the Spectrum: How Autism Movements Resist Experts and Create Knowledge, newly published by Columbia University Press (January 2024). Spaces on the Spectrum takes on the autistic rights and alternative biomedical movements, which approach autism either as a difference to be accepted or as a medical condition to be treated.
In the Media
Photos
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