Literature DB >> 21495492

Strange distance: towards an anthropology of interior dialogue.

Andrew Irving1.   

Abstract

The capacity for a complex inner life--encompassing inner speech, imaginative reverie, and unarticulated moods--is an essential feature of living with illness and a principal means through which people interpret, understand, and manage their condition. Nevertheless, anthropology lacks a generally accepted theory or methodological framework for understanding how interiority relates to people's public actions and expressions. Moreover, as conventional social-scientific methods are often too static to understand the fluidity of perception among people living with illness or bodily instability, I argue we need to develop new, practical approaches to knowing. By placing the problem of interiority directly into the field and turning it into an ethnographic, practice-based question to be addressed through fieldwork in collaboration with informants, this article works alongside women living with HIV/AIDS in Uganda with the aim of capturing the unvoiced but sometimes radical changes in being, belief, and perception that accompany terminal illness.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21495492     DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1387.2010.01133.x

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


  1 in total

1.  Point of view filming and the elicitation interview.

Authors:  Jonathan Skinner; Gerard J Gormley
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2016-08
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.