

Research
Projects and Interests

Site Contents:
Current Research Projects:
Ethnography
of a Chinese Population within the Canadian Cultural Mosaic: Cultural
Identity, Lifecycle Issues, and Health Practices Among Montreal Chinese: Analysis
of interviews and fieldnotes
on men and women of Chinese ethnicity living in Montréal, focusing on how
they negotiate multiple languages and cultures in their everyday lives and
their sense of identity and with regard to the lifecycle, generational
issues, and health practices, 2000-present.
|
Gender,
health, sexuality, the lifecycle, and aging in mainland China: Analysis
of the ethnographic interview, survey, and media data I have collected on
gender, health, sexuality, the lifecycle, aging, middle age, menopause, and
old age in mainland China, 1992-present.
|
Issues
of efficacy and evidence in traditional Chinese medicine: Analysis
of debates concerning the interface between traditional Chinese medicine and
standards of efficacy prioritized in contemporary formulations of
evidence-based medicine.
|
Visual
documentation of Chinese communities in North America and China:
Documentation of cultural activities and healing practices through digital
still photography and digital video documentation. Conducted in Chinatowns in
Canada
and the U.S.
and in the People's Republic of China,
1998-present.
|
Research and Teaching Interests:
General:
- Sociocultural anthropology
- Medical anthropology
- Health, illness, healing, and
health care systems
- Psychological anthropology
- Identity and experience
- Lifecycle, development, and
aging
- Gender and sexuality
- Economic development/social
change
- Multiculturalism/globalization
- Influences of gender, class,
culture and ethnicity on health.
- Cultural and generational
differences in experience of the lifecycle.
- Health concerns and social
issues marking lifecourse
transitions.
- Integration of qualitative
and quantitative research methodologies.
- Visual anthropology
Asian
Studies:
- Chinese culture and history
- Chinese experiences of health
and illness
- Healing practices in China
- Chinese conceptions of the
lifecycle
- Middle age and menopause in China
- Generational differences in China
- Chinese in Montreal, Canada,
and US
- Eastern/ Western cultural
interplay
Academic Positions:
University
of Vermont
Associate Professor, Anthropology
May
2004-present
Assistant Professor,
Anthropology
September 1998-April 2004
Visiting Assistant
Professor, Anthropology January
1998-May 1998
Harvard
University
Teaching Fellow, Asian
Studies
September 1997-January 1998
Teaching Fellow,
Anthropology
September 1991-June 1997
Educational
Background:
Harvard
University
Ph.D. in Anthropology, June 1998
Harvard
University
M.A. in Anthropology, June 1994
Beijing
University
Fulbright/ITT International Fellow
Chinese History and Culture
September 1989-May 1990
Dartmouth
College
B.A., Summa Cum Laude, June 1989
University
College
London Study
Abroad, English Literature
October 1987-March 1988
Beijing
Normal
University Study
Abroad, Chinese
Language/Literature
June-December 1986
Bellows
Free Academy, Fairfax, VT
Valedictorian, June 1985
Selected Publications:
Jeanne
L. Shea, "Cross-Cultural Comparison of Women's
Midlife Symptom-Reporting: A China
Study," Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry: An International Journal of
Comparative Cross-Cultural Research, September 2006(30:3).
Jeanne
L. Shea, " Parsing the Ageing Asian Woman:
Symptom Results from the China
Study of Midlife Women,” Maturitas: The European
Menopause Journal, August 2006(55:1):36-50.
Jeanne
L. Shea, "Applying Evidence-Based Medicine to
Traditional Chinese Medicine: Debate and Strategy," Journal of
Alternative and Complementary Medicine," April 2006(12:3):255-63.
Jeanne
L. Shea, "Chinese Women's Symptoms: Relation to
Menopause, Age and Related Attitudes," Climacteric: The Journal of the
International Menopause Society, February 2006(9:1):30-39.
Jeanne
L. Shea, "Midlife Women's Symptom Reporting in China,"
American Journal of Human Biology, March/April 2006(18:2):219-222.
Jeanne
L. Shea,"Sexual 'Liberation' and the Older Woman
in Contemporary Mainland China," Modern China:
An International Quarterly of History and Social Science, January
2005(31:1):115-47.
Jeanne
L. Shea, "Setting the Anthropological Record Straight: A Critique of
Marshall Sahlins’ Characterization of Classic
Theories of Causality in Anthropology," Anthropos,
September 2003(98):489-497.