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Exploring the impacts of technology on everyday citizens

Associate Professor Dwai Banerjee examines topics ranging from cancer care to the history of computing.
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Dwai Banerjee stands outside near the MIT Museum

“I enjoy having the freedom to explore new topics,” says Dwai Banerjee, an associate professor in MIT’s Program in Science, Technology, and Society (STS).

Photo: Jared Charney

Give Dwai Banerjee credit: He doesn’t pick easy topics to study.

Banerjee is an MIT scholar who in a short time has produced a wide-ranging body of work about the impact of technology on society — and who, as a trained anthropologist, has a keen eye for people’s lived experience.

In one book, “Enduring Cancer,” from 2020, Banerjee studies the lives of mostly poor cancer patients in Delhi, digging into their psychological horizons and interactions with the world of medical care. Another book, “Hematologies,” also from 2020, co-authored with anthropologist Jacob Copeman, examines common ideas about blood in Indian society.

And in still another book, forthcoming later this year, Banerjee explores the history of computing in India — including the attempt by some to generate growth through domestic advances, even as global computer firms were putting the industry on rather different footing.

“I enjoy having the freedom to explore new topics,” says Banerjee, an associate professor in MIT’s Program in Science, Technology, and Society (STS). “For some people, building on their previous work is best, but I need new ideas to keep me going. For me, that feels more natural. You get invested in a subject for a time and try to get everything out of it.”

What largely links these disparate topics together is that Banerjee, in his work, is a people person: He aims to illuminate the lives and thoughts of everyday citizens as they interact with the technologies and systems of contemporary society.

After all, a cancer diagnosis can be life-changing not just in physical terms, but psychologically. For some, having cancer creates “a sense of being unmoored from prior certainties about oneself and one’s place in the world,” as Banerjee writes in “Enduring Cancer.”

The technology that enables diagnoses does not meet all our human needs, so the book traces the complicated inner lives of patients, and a medical system shifting to meet psychological and palliative-care challenges. Technology and society interact beyond blockbuster products, as the book deftly implies.

For his research and teaching, Banerjee was awarded tenure at MIT last year.

The full article can be read here.