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Local health traditions : plurality and marginality in South Asia / edited by

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: Publication details: Hyderabad : Orient Blackswan, 2019.Description: xvi, 328 p. : ill. ; 22 cmISBN:
  • 9789352876617 (hbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23 362.10954 MIS
Contents:
Introduction, Arima Mishra -- SECTION I LEGITIMACY AND RECOGNITION; 1. Authenticity, Alliances and Results, Notions of Legitimacy Held by Traditional Healers in South India, Devaki Nambiar, Arima Mishra, Harilal Madhavan, Sarika Kadam, Shrish N.R., Steffy Dhayalan and Pooja Venkatesh -- 2. Accreditation, Certification and Self-regulation, An Innovative Approach for Strenghtening and Reintegrarting Traditional Community Health Care Providers, Unnikrishnan Payyappallimana, Hariramamurthi Govindaswamy, Sarin Sasikumar and Debjani Roy -- 3. Whom Do the Rural Poor Consult for Healt Care and How Much Do They Spend in India's Pluralistic Health Care Arenas?, Mark Nichter -- 4. Medical Pluralism and the Political Economy of Obstetric Care among Bangladeshi Women in Britain, Sultana Mustafa Khanum -- SECTION II DOCUMENTATION AND SYSTEMATISATION OF TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE; 5. From Siddha Corpus to Siddha Medicine Reflection on the Reduction of Siddha Knowledge through Exploration of Manuscripts, Brigitte Sebastia -- 6. Family Repositories to 'Knowledge Commons', The Discourse of Documenting Local Health Traditions in Contemporary Kerala, Harilal Madhavan and Praveen Lal -- 7. Documenting 'Folk' Ayurvedic Knowledge in Uttarakhand, Insights from Critical Medical Anthropology, Moe Nakazora -- 8. Documentation of Traditional Health Knowledge To What End? Arima Mishra and Devaki Nambair -- SECTION III GENDER IN HEALING, 9. Nested Marginalities, Women in healing in South India, Arima Mishra, Maya Annie Elias, Devaki Nambair and Rajeev B.R. -- 10. Ritual Pollution and Women's Blood, Listening to Dais -- 11. Dais Transforming the Traditions, Renu Khanna -- 12. May the Vital Force Be with You, An Indian Homeopathic Doctor's Approach to the Gendered Ills of Our Time, Cecilia Coale Van Hollen
Summary: The study of medical pluralism, characterised by the authoritative presence of the state in defining ‘legitimate’ inclusion and exclusion, has long been studied in medical anthropology. However, recent scholarship has begun to question this statist frame. Local health traditions extends this discussion by focusing on the ‘marginal’ categories of medicine and healing that range from home remedies and herbal medicine to dais, bone-setters and spiritual healers. These different forms of medicine have recently come to be known as ‘local health traditions’ in the policy texts.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Gulbanoo Premji Library of Azim Premji University, Bengaluru 2nd Floor 362.10954 MIS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 45640
Books Books Gulbanoo Premji Library of Azim Premji University, Bengaluru 2nd Floor 362.10954 MIS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 45639
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction, Arima Mishra -- SECTION I LEGITIMACY AND RECOGNITION; 1. Authenticity, Alliances and Results, Notions of Legitimacy Held by Traditional Healers in South India, Devaki Nambiar, Arima Mishra, Harilal Madhavan, Sarika Kadam, Shrish N.R., Steffy Dhayalan and Pooja Venkatesh -- 2. Accreditation, Certification and Self-regulation, An Innovative Approach for Strenghtening and Reintegrarting Traditional Community Health Care Providers, Unnikrishnan Payyappallimana, Hariramamurthi Govindaswamy, Sarin Sasikumar and Debjani Roy -- 3. Whom Do the Rural Poor Consult for Healt Care and How Much Do They Spend in India's Pluralistic Health Care Arenas?, Mark Nichter -- 4. Medical Pluralism and the Political Economy of Obstetric Care among Bangladeshi Women in Britain, Sultana Mustafa Khanum -- SECTION II DOCUMENTATION AND SYSTEMATISATION OF TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE; 5. From Siddha Corpus to Siddha Medicine Reflection on the Reduction of Siddha Knowledge through Exploration of Manuscripts, Brigitte Sebastia -- 6. Family Repositories to 'Knowledge Commons', The Discourse of Documenting Local Health Traditions in Contemporary Kerala, Harilal Madhavan and Praveen Lal -- 7. Documenting 'Folk' Ayurvedic Knowledge in Uttarakhand, Insights from Critical Medical Anthropology, Moe Nakazora -- 8. Documentation of Traditional Health Knowledge To What End? Arima Mishra and Devaki Nambair -- SECTION III GENDER IN HEALING, 9. Nested Marginalities, Women in healing in South India, Arima Mishra, Maya Annie Elias, Devaki Nambair and Rajeev B.R. -- 10. Ritual Pollution and Women's Blood, Listening to Dais -- 11. Dais Transforming the Traditions, Renu Khanna -- 12. May the Vital Force Be with You, An Indian Homeopathic Doctor's Approach to the Gendered Ills of Our Time, Cecilia Coale Van Hollen

The study of medical pluralism, characterised by the authoritative presence of the state in defining ‘legitimate’ inclusion and exclusion, has long been studied in medical anthropology. However, recent scholarship has begun to question this statist frame. Local health traditions extends this discussion by focusing on the ‘marginal’ categories of medicine and healing that range from home remedies and herbal medicine to dais, bone-setters and spiritual healers. These different forms of medicine have recently come to be known as ‘local health traditions’ in the policy texts.

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