Literature DB >> 11283770

[Contact, epidemics, and the body as agents of change: a study of AIDS among the Xokléng indians in the State of Santa Catarina, Brazil].

F B Wiik1.   

Abstract

Based on an analysis of AIDS cases among the Xokléng Indians in 1988, this article relates the illness phenomenon to socio-cultural disruptions and transformations in this indigenous group's universe, focusing on the history of their contact with Brazilian national society. The analysis and interpretation of this relationship are based on anthropological theories about the centrality of the body, corporeality, and degenerative bodily processes in Brazilian indigenous societies, according to which the body, society, and macro-situational elements are articulated by social praxis, and should thus be related in socio-anthropological studies of health-illness phenomena. The article briefly describes the history of epidemics emerging from contact and attempts to relate them to specific historical contexts. Ethnomedical categories, cosmology, and Xokléng concepts of corporeality are related to their social organization, which are thus connected to the AIDS cases. The latter are presented with a special focus on the relationship between their emergence and the changes occurring in the Xokléng world with the construction of a dam bordering on their land.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11283770     DOI: 10.1590/s0102-311x2001000200014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cad Saude Publica        ISSN: 0102-311X            Impact factor:   1.632


  1 in total

1.  Epidemiological aspects of HIV infection and AIDS among indigenous populations.

Authors:  Samara Vilas-Bôas Graeff; Renata Palópoli Pícolli; Rui Arantes; Vivianne de Oliveira Landgraf de Castro; Rivaldo Venâncio da Cunha
Journal:  Rev Saude Publica       Date:  2019-09-09       Impact factor: 2.106

  1 in total

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