Literature DB >> 18562492

Coming to our senses: appreciating the sensorial in medical anthropology.

Mark Nichter1.   

Abstract

This article supports the call for the sensorially engaged anthropological study of healing modalities, popular health culture, dietary practices, drug foods and pharmaceuticals, and idioms of distress. Six concepts are of central importance to sensorial anthropology: embodiment, the mindful body, mimesis, local biology, somatic idioms of distress, and 'the work of culture'. Fieldwork in South and Southeast Asia and North America illustrates how cultural interpretations associate bodily sensations with passions (strong emotions) and anxiety states, and bodily communication about social relations. Lay interpretations of bodily sensations inform and are informed by local understanding of ethnophysiology, health, illness, and the way medicines act in the body. Bodily states are manipulated by the ingestion of substances ranging from drug foods (e.g., sources of caffeine, nicotine, dietary supplements) to pharmaceuticals that stimulate or suppress sensations concordant with cultural values, work demands, and health concerns. Social relations are articulated at the site of the body through somatic modes of attention that index bodily ways of knowing learned through socialization, bodily memories, and the ability to relate to how another is likely to be feeling in a particular context. Sensorial anthropology can contribute to the study of transformative healing and trajectories of healthcare seeking and patterns of referral in pluralistic healthcare arenas.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18562492     DOI: 10.1177/1363461508089764

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry        ISSN: 1363-4615


  14 in total

1.  Idioms of distress revisited.

Authors:  Mark Nichter
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2010-06

2.  Appropriation and dementia in India.

Authors:  Bianca Brijnath; Lenore Manderson
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2011-12

3.  A complex, nonlinear dynamic systems perspective on Ayurveda and Ayurvedic research.

Authors:  Jennifer Rioux
Journal:  J Altern Complement Med       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 2.579

4.  Symptom clusters at midlife: a four-country comparison of checklist and qualitative responses.

Authors:  Lynnette Leidy Sievert; Carla Makhlouf Obermeyer
Journal:  Menopause       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 2.953

5.  Ways of Hoping: Navigating the Paradox of Hope and Despair in Chronic Pain.

Authors:  Emery R Eaves; Mark Nichter; Cheryl Ritenbaugh
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2016-03

6.  Fighting with Spirits: Migration Trauma, Acculturative Stress, and New Sibling Transition-A Clinical Case Study of an 8-Year-Old Girl with Absence Epilepsy.

Authors:  Dimitrios Chartonas; Ruma Bose
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2015-12

7.  Kiyang-yang, a West-African postwar idiom of distress.

Authors:  Joop T de Jong; Ria Reis
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2010-06

8.  Reconsidering the placebo response from a broad anthropological perspective.

Authors:  Jennifer Jo Thompson; Cheryl Ritenbaugh; Mark Nichter
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2009-03

9.  From mundane medicines to euphorigenic drugs: How pharmaceutical pleasures are initiated, foregrounded, and made durable.

Authors:  Henry Bundy; Gilbert Quintero
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2017-10-03

10.  Sensorial pedagogies, hungry fat cells and the limits of nutritional health education.

Authors:  Emilia Sanabria
Journal:  Biosocieties       Date:  2015-06
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