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Paperback Writing at the Margin: Discourse Between Anthropology and Medicine Book

ISBN: 0520209656

ISBN13: 9780520209657

Writing at the Margin: Discourse Between Anthropology and Medicine

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Book Overview

One of the most influential and creative scholars in medical anthropology takes stock of his recent intellectual odysseys in this collection of essays. Arthur Kleinman, an anthropologist and psychiatrist who has studied in Taiwan, China, and North America since 1968, draws upon his bicultural, multidisciplinary background to propose alternative strategies for thinking about how, in the postmodern world, the social and medical relate.

Writing at the Margin explores the border between medical and social problems, the boundary between health and social change. Kleinman studies the body as the mediator between individual and collective experience, finding that many health problems-for example the trauma of violence or depression in the course of chronic pain-are less individual medical problems than interpersonal experiences of social suffering. He argues for an ethnographic approach to moral practice in medicine, one that embraces the infrapolitical context of illness, the responses to it, the social institutions relating to it, and the way it is configured in medical ethics.

Previously published in various journals, these essays have been revised, updated, and brought together with an introduction, an essay on violence and the politics of post-traumatic stress disorder, and a new chapter that examines the contemporary ethnographic literature of medical anthropology.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Kleinman reflects

This book seems to be closer to the thinking of a man late in his career. I get the sense that his thinking has changed since his famous paper in the annals of internal medicine where he makes the distinction between illness and disease. He seems to ignore the etymological significance of the term "disease" as he has moved more to the social constructionist position in medical anthropology, which you will find here. Still, this is a good book and he raises the classical questions about psychiatric suffering, medicalization, labeling, and the hegemony of particular approaches to medicine.
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