Literature DB >> 7610430

Making the biopolitical subject: Cambodian immigrants, refugee medicine and cultural citizenship in California.

A Ong1.   

Abstract

Linking the health profession to the normalization of citizenship, scholars influenced by Michel Foucault claim that while biomedicine attends to the health of bodies, it is also constitutive of the social and bureaucratic practices that socialize subjects of the modern welfare state. Yet, we seldom learn about how patients themselves draw the medical gaze, nor how their resistances to biomedical intervention both invite and deflect control. I try to show this by means of clinicians' and Khmer refugees' interpretations of their encounters. This study illustrates that refugee medicine is a mix of good intentions, desire to control diseased and deviant populations, and the exigencies of limited resources which often favor medicalization. Californian clinicians, many of them Asian-Americans, display a deep faith in the efficacy of modern medicine for third world patients so that they can function in the new country. Khmer refugees, in contrast, seek rather specific resources while wishing to elude control over the body and mind that goes with medical care. I argue that the biomedical gaze is not such a diffused hegemonic power but is itself generated by the complex contestation of refugee subjects pursuing their own goals. Clinicians and refugees are equally caught up in webs of power involving control and subterfuge, appropriation and resistance, negotiation and learning that constitute biopolitical lessons of what becoming American may entail for an underprivileged Asian group.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7610430     DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(94)00230-q

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  6 in total

Review 1.  Disciplining addictions: the bio-politics of methadone and heroin in the United States.

Authors:  P Bourgois
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2000-06

2.  Health, welfare reform, and narratives of uncertainty among Cambodian refugees.

Authors:  G Becker; Y Beyene; P Ken
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2000-06

3.  Care of the self and patient participation in genetic discourse: a Foucauldian reading of the surgeon general's "my family health portrait" program.

Authors:  Benjamin R Bates
Journal:  J Genet Couns       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 2.537

4.  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

5.  "Stains" on their self-discipline: Public health, hygiene, and the disciplining of undocumented immigrant parents in the nation's internal borderlands.

Authors:  Sarah Horton; Judith C Barker
Journal:  Am Ethnol       Date:  2009-11-01

6.  Chumnguh thleum: understanding liver illness and hepatitis B among Cambodian immigrants.

Authors:  Nancy J Burke; Hoai Huyen Do; Jocelyn Talbot; Channdara Sos; Danika Svy; Victoria M Taylor
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  2011-02
  6 in total

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