Open Access BASE2014

Representations, Ritual, & Social Renewal: Essays In Africanist Medical Anthropology

In: http://hdl.handle.net/1808/14950

Abstract

Specifically, this collection was assembled for two engagements during the author's sabbatical during the Spring semester, 2004. The first was a set of lectures at Harvard University in connection with a consultancy at the African Studies Program there. The second engagement was a six-week short term course at the Medical University of Vienna, in Austria. In this connection the author was able to make a two week trip to the Sudan, and to study Sufi sheik-healers. Some of the essays were also given by the author at other conferences, or reflect additional thinking for such venues. The collection then became a textbook in the author's course Anthropology 461/761 "Introduction to Medical Anthropology" at the University of Kansas. ; The slides were prepared to accompany some of the lectures of Representations, Ritual, and Social Renewal. They are numbered to correspond to the appropriate chapter in the text. Words or phrases in bold in the text identify images in the presentations. ; The essays in this collection reflect the author's thinking about sickness, health, and healing in Central Africa in the early years of the 21st century."Representations, ritual, and social renewal" encapsulates a perspective on Africanist medical anthropology that is sensitive to how issues of disease, health and healing are seen, communicated, symbolized; how they are situated in concrete behaviors and political-economic structures and conditions that affect health; and how they are engaged by common people, specialists, and leaders in projects and endeavors to ameliorate health. Although the setting of most essays is in the Kongo region of Western Equatorial Africa (the Democratic Republic of Congo, northern Angola, and southern Republic of Congo-Brazzaville), where the author conducted much of his fieldwork, some topics have a wider sweep, such as: the verbal cognates of Bantu-speaking Sub-Saharan Africa, and the sub-continental distribution of some institutions and concepts; the environmental settings for therapeutic traditions in ...

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