Literature DB >> 12846115

The story catches you and you fall down: tragedy, ethnography, and "cultural competence".

Janelle S Taylor1.   

Abstract

Anne Fadiman's The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures (Noonday Press, 1997) is widely used in "cultural competence" efforts within U.S. medical school curricula. This article addresses the relationship between theory, narrative form, and teaching through a close critical reading of that book that is informed by theories of tragedy and ethnographies of medicine. I argue that The Spirit Catches You is so influential as ethnography because it is so moving as a story; it is so moving as a story because it works so well as tragedy; and it works so well as tragedy precisely because of the static, reified, essentialist understanding of "culture" from which it proceeds. If professional anthropologists wish our own best work to speak to "apparitions of culture" within medicine and other "cultures of no culture," I suggest that we must find compelling new narrative forms in which to convey more complex understandings of "culture."

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12846115     DOI: 10.1525/maq.2003.17.2.159

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  12 in total

Review 1.  The Importance of Military Cultural Competence.

Authors:  Eric G Meyer; Brian W Writer; William Brim
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 5.285

2.  The play is now reality: affective turns, narrative struggles, and theorizing emotion as practical experience.

Authors:  Anita Kumar
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2013-12

3.  Reducing disparities in mental health care: suggestions from the Dartmouth-Howard collaboration.

Authors:  Elizabeth Carpenter-Song; Rob Whitley; William Lawson; Ernest Quimby; Robert E Drake
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  2009-08-07

4.  "Not here": making the spaces and subjects of "global health" in Botswana.

Authors:  Betsey Brada
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2011-06

5.  From healing to witchcraft: on ritual speech and roboticization in the hospital.

Authors:  Adrienne Pine
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2011-06

6.  From "lists of traits" to "open-mindedness": emerging issues in cultural competence education.

Authors:  Angela C Jenks
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2011-06

7.  Orienting to Medicine: Scripting Professionalism, Hierarchy, and Social Difference at the Start of Medical School.

Authors:  Sienna R Craig; Rebekah Scott; Kristy Blackwood
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2018-09

8.  The ethical self-fashioning of physicians and health care systems in culturally appropriate health care.

Authors:  Susan J Shaw; Julie Armin
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2011-06

9.  Patrolling your blind spots: introspection and public catharsis in a medical school faculty development course to reduce unconscious bias in medicine.

Authors:  Seth Donal Hannah; Elizabeth Carpenter-Song
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2013-06

10.  Physical activity in South Asians: an in-depth qualitative study to explore motivations and facilitators.

Authors:  Ruth Jepson; Fiona M Harris; Alison Bowes; Roma Robertson; Ghizala Avan; Aziz Sheikh
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-10-10       Impact factor: 3.240

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.