Literature DB >> 18958786

Nerves as embodied metaphor in the Canada/Mexico seasonal agricultural workers program.

Avis Mysyk1, Margaret England, Juan Arturo Avila Gallegos.   

Abstract

This article examines nerves among participants in the Canada/Mexico Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (C/MSAWP). Based on in-depth interviews with 30 Mexican farm workers in southwestern Ontario, we demonstrate that nerves embodies the distress of economic need, relative powerlessness, and the contradictions inherent in the C/MSAWP that result in various life's lesions. We also explore their use of the nerves idiom as an embodied metaphor for their awareness of the breakdown in self/society relations and, in certain cases, of the lack of control over even themselves. This article contributes to that body of literature that locates nerves at the "normal" end of the "normal/abnormal" continuum of popular illness categories because, despite the similarities in symptoms of nerves among Mexican farm workers and those of anxiety and/or mood disorders, medicalization has not occurred. If nerves has not been medicalized among Mexican farm workers, neither has it given rise to resistance to their relative powerlessness as migrant farm workers. Nonetheless, nerves does serve as an effective vehicle for expressing their distress within the context of the C/MSAWP.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18958786     DOI: 10.1080/01459740802427729

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol        ISSN: 0145-9740


  2 in total

1.  Doctors within borders: meeting the health care needs of migrant farm workers in Canada.

Authors:  Michael Pysklywec; Janet McLaughlin; Michelle Tew; Ted Haines
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2011-04-18       Impact factor: 8.262

2.  Employers' paradoxical views about temporary foreign migrant workers' health: a qualitative study in rural farms in southern Ontario.

Authors:  Miya Narushima; Ana Lourdes Sanchez
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2014-09-10
  2 in total

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