ТОП просматриваемых книг сайта:
A Companion to Medical Anthropology. Группа авторов
Читать онлайн.Название A Companion to Medical Anthropology
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119718949
Автор произведения Группа авторов
Жанр Культурология
Издательство John Wiley & Sons Limited
11 Erickson, P.I. (2008). Ethnomedicine. Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press.
12 Farmer, P. (2003). Pathologies of power: Health, human rights and the new war on the poor. North American Dialogue 6: 1–4.
13 Foster, G.M. and Anderson, B.G. (1978). Medical Anthropology. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
14 Galtung, J. (1969). Violence, peace, and peace research. Journal of Peace Research 6 (3): 167–191.
15 Gandy, M. and Zumla, A. (eds.) (2003). Return of the White Plague: Global Poverty and the “New” Tuberculosis. New York: Verso.
16 Gillespie, S. and Kadiyala, S. (2005). HIV/AIDS and Food and Nutrition Security: From Evidence to Action. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute.
17 Global Health Initiative. (2008). In brief: The global impact of infectious diseases.
18 Herrero, M., Rivas, P., Rallón, N., Ramírez-Olivencia, G., and Puente, S. (2007). HIV and malaria. AIDS Reviews 9: 88–98.
19 Horton, S.B. (2016). They Leave Their Kidneys in the Fields: Injury, Illness, and Illegality among U.S. Farmworkers, California Series in Public Anthropology. Oakland, California: University of California Press.
20 Hotez, P.J., Molyneux, D.H., Fenwick, A., Ottesen, E., Sachs, S.E., and Sach, J.D. (2006). Incorporating a rapid-impact package for neglected tropical diseases with programs for HIV/ AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. PLoS Med 3 (5): e102. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030102.
21 Joralemon, D. (1999). Exploring Medical Anthropology, 2nd edition. Allyn and Bacon: Boston.
22 Kleinman, A., Das, V., and Lock, M. (eds.) (1997). Social Suffering. Berkeley: University of California Press.
23 Langer, L. (1996). The alarmed vision: Social suffering and holocaust atrocity. Dædalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 125: 47–65.
24 Lock, M. and Scheper-Hughes, N. (1996). A critical-interpretive approach in medical anthropology: Rituals and routines of discipline and dissent. In: Medical Anthropology. (ed. C.F. Sargent and T.M. Johnson), 41–70. Westport, CT: Praeger.
25 McElroy, A. and Townsend, P. (2009). Medical Anthropology in Ecological Perspective, 5th edition. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
26 Metzl, J. and Kirkland, A.R. (Eds.) (2010). Against Health: How Health Became the New Morality, Biopolitics, Medicine, Technoscience, and Health in the 21st Century. New York: New York University Press.
27 Mol, A. (2008). The Logic of Care: Health and the Problem of Patient Choice. New York: Routledge, London.
28 Mulligan, J.M. (2014). Unmanageable Care: An Ethnography of Health Care Privatization in Puerto Rico. New York: New York University Press.
29 Nichter, M. (ed.) (1992). Anthropological Approaches to the Study of Ethnomedicine. New York: Gordon and Breach Science Publishers.
30 Nichter, M. (2008). Global Health. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press.
31 Perro, M. and Adams, V. (2017). What’s Making Our Children Sick? How Industrial Food Is Causing an Epidemic of Chronic Illness, and What Parents (And Doctors) Can Do about It. White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green Publishing.
32 Rylko-Bauer, B., Singer, M., and John, V.W. (2006). Reclaiming applied anthropology: Its past, present, and future. American Anthropologist 108: 178–190.
33 Sargent, C.F. and Johnson, T.M. (eds.) (1996). Medical Anthropology: Contemporary Theory and Method. Westport CT: Praeger.
34 Scheper-Hughes, N. and Lock, M.M. (1987). The mindful body: A prolegomenon to future work in medical anthropology. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 1: 6–41.
35 Singer, M. (2009a). Introduction to Syndemics: A Systems Approach to Public and Com- Munity Health. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
36 Singer, M. (2009b). Ecosyndemis: Global warming and the coming plagues of the 21st century. In: Plagues, Epidemics and Ideas. (ed. A. Swedlund and A. Herring), 21–37. London: Berg.
37 Singer, M. (2009c). Beyond global warming: Interacting ecocrises and the critical anthropology of health. Anthropological_Quarterly 82: 795–820.
38 Singer, M. (2010). Atmospheric and marine pluralea interactions and species extinction risks. Journal of Cosmology 8: 1832–1837.
39 Singer, M. (2019). Climate Change and Social Inequality: The Health and Social Costs of Global Warming. New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, London.
40 Singer, M. (2021). Perils of Eco-crises Interaction: Human Health and the Changing Environment, First edition. Hoboken: ed. Wiley.
41 Singer, M. and Baer, H.A. (2007). Introducing Medical Anthropology: A Discipline in Action. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press.
42 Singer, M. and Erickson, P.I. (2013). Global Health: An Anthropological Perspective. Long Grove, Illinois: Waveland Press, Inc.
43 Sunder Rajan, K. (2017). Pharmocracy: Value, Politics, and Knowledge in Global Biomedicine, Experimental Futures. Durham: Duke University Press.
44 World Health Organization. (2004). Maternal Mortality in 2000: Estimates Developed by WHO, UNICEF and UNFPA. Department of Reproductive Health and Research. Geneva: World Health Organization Press.
45 World Health Organization, 2005 World Health Report. (2005). Make Every Mother and Child Count. Geneva: World Health Organization Press.
46 World Health Organization, 2008 The World Health Report. (2008). Introduction and overview. Electronic Document. http://www.who.int/whr/2008/08_overview_en.pdf.
CHAPTER 1 Re/inventing Medical Anthropology: Definitional Struggles and Key Debates (Or: Answering the Cri Du Coeur)
Elisa J. Sobo
INTRODUCTION
The distinct subfield called “medical anthropology” emerged in the 1970s as the outcome of many lines of intertwined inquiry. Interest in diverse health practices and understandings goes back centuries, pre-dating anthropology’s establishment as an academic discipline. However, after World War II, a notable subset within the field began to consider health a topic worthy of focused specialization. Anglophone anthropology’s participation in post-World War II international and public health efforts fueled this impulse: Data collected in earlier times for simple descriptive purposes proved invaluable as these scholars worked to help said health programs succeed. That is, medical anthropology’s concretized emergence was driven by ethnology’s newly valuable, directly “technical” (Scotch 1963) relevance. Indeed, the first review of the nascent field, William Caudill’s “Applied Anthropology in Medicine” (1953), emphasized its practical utility.
The shorter phrase “medical anthropology” seems first to have been used by P.T. Regester (1956) and then by Khwaja Hasan and B.G. Prasad (1959), while an article by James Roney carried the phrase in its title (1959). But what did this label describe? What tensions did it encompass? Did these tensions exhibit different characteristics in different global settings?
Building on previous historical reviews (including Anderson 2018; Browner 1997; Claudill 1953; Colson and Selby 1974; Fabrega 1971; Foster 1974; Foster and Anderson 1978; Good 1994; Hasan 1975; Lock and Nichter 2002; McElroy 1986; Polgar 1962; Scotch 1963; Sobo 2004; Todd and Ruffini 1979; Weidman 1986), I examine medical anthology’s rise as a named subfield. This process unfolded initially in the USA, where the great majority of medical anthropologists were, and still are, concentrated. However, anthropology is an international discipline: The subfield’s emergence depended on inputs from