Graduate Student
Emory University
Atlanta, Georgia
Samantha A. Chipman neurodiverse scholar and Chinese adoptee who works in the Health Humanities, NeuroHumanities, Cognitive Literary Studies, Autism and Neurodiversity, Neuroethics, Narrative Ethics, the History of Psychiatry, Death and Dying, and Archival Methodologies. An English PhD student and Bioethics certificate candidate at Emory University, she has written and presented about various topics including epistemic injustices experienced by women and girls with autism, decolonizing autism, the AI ethics of autism diagnosis, restorative justice in healthcare settings, language-based health inequities, as well as Asian/American and adoptee mental health. Samantha is also co-founder and co-creator of Intersecting Minds: A NeuroHumanities & Consciousness Collective, a collaborative and inclusive space for individuals interested in the neurohumanities and consciousness studies. She ultimately hopes to mobilize the intersections between the health humanities, bioethics, and archival methodologies to advance disability justice, narrative ethics, and health equity in healthcare settings.
A Primer on Epistemic Injustice and Patients with Non-English Language Preference
Thursday, September 19, 2024
3:00 PM – 4:00 PM CT
Friday, September 20, 2024
3:45 PM – 4:45 PM CT