Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 272 pages
- Published by: Left Coast Press March 30, 2007
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 1598742752
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-1598742756
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Book Dimensions:
9 x 6 x 0.8 inches
- Weighs: 12 ounces
Product Review
"Medical knowledge is transient. Practices and protocols change, rapidly or over time, and old knowledge co-exists with the new. In addition, researchers may find conflicting data which co-exists for as long as those who learn it practice, and the field is rife with intuitive bits of information. And yet, medical anthropology is slow to change from the otherwise abandoned notion that cultures are discrete, bounded and rule-driven. This collection of 12 essays looks at the ways a variety of cultures locate boundaries of medical knowledge, understand conflicts and changes, and create cultures of health. Topics include colonial and post-colonial medical thinking, bias in fieldwork, oversystematization, ambivalence in integrative medicine, the consequences of not knowing in medical and psychiatric settings, cultural forces on sexual knowledge, linking borders in indigenous health practices, the constraints of violence, treatment of youth, and the role of religious-based mores and standards and practices of care." Book News, Inc.
"Editor Littlewood (Univ. College London) has gathered an impressive group
to consider what can and cannot be known about sickness and social suffering in a range of locales (primarily African), based on fieldwork conducted over the last 25 years
Recommended." CHOICE Magazine
"This edited compilation is a delightful text containing much \'food for thought.\' The readings range from discussing the problems with current theoretical models of medical anthropology to the conflicts and challenges of fieldwork." - American Anthropologist
Product Description
Social scientific studies of medicine typically assume that systems of medical knowledge are uniform and consistent. But while anthropologists have long rejected the notion that cultures are discrete, bounded, and rule-drive entities, medical anthropology has been slower to develop alternative approaches to understanding cultures of health. This provocative volume considers the theoretical, methodological, and ethnographic implications of the fact that medical knowledge is frequently dynamic, incoherent, and contradictory, and that and our understanding of it is necessarily incomplete and partial. In diverse settings from indigenous cultures to Western medical industries, contributors consider such issues as how to define the boundaries of medical knowledge versus other kinds of knowledge; how to understand overlapping and shifting medical discourses; the medical professions need for anthropologists to produce explanatory models; the limits of the Western scientific method and the potential for methodological pluralism; constraints on fieldwork including violence and structural factors limiting access; and the subjectivity and interests of the researcher. On Knowing and Not Knowing in the Anthropology of Medicine will stimulate innovative thinking and productive debate for practitioners, researchers, and students in the social science of health and medicine.