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The social anthropology of sickness and health has always been concerned with religious cosmologies: how societies make sense of such issues as prediction and control of misfortune and fate; the malevolence of others; the benevolence (or otherwise) of the mystical world; local understanding and explanations of the natural and ultra-human worlds. This volume presents differing categorizations and conflicts that occur as people seek to make sense of suffering and their experiences. Cosmologies, whether incorporating the divine or as purely secular, lead us to interpret human action and the human…mehr
The social anthropology of sickness and health has always been concerned with religious cosmologies: how societies make sense of such issues as prediction and control of misfortune and fate; the malevolence of others; the benevolence (or otherwise) of the mystical world; local understanding and explanations of the natural and ultra-human worlds. This volume presents differing categorizations and conflicts that occur as people seek to make sense of suffering and their experiences. Cosmologies, whether incorporating the divine or as purely secular, lead us to interpret human action and the human constitution, its ills and its healing and, in particular, ways which determine and limit our very possibilities.
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Rebecca Lynch is an Assistant Professor in Medical Anthropology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM). She has conducted fieldwork in Trinidad and the UK. Taking an approach that crosses the intersection between religion and medicine, she has published on socio-cultural, moral, and scientific constructions of the body, health and illness, and on bodily interaction with the non-human through technology, protocols, bodily fluids, and spirit agents.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Introduction: Divinity, Disease, Distress Roland Littlewood and Rebecca Lynch Chapter 1. Why Animism Matters David Napier Chapter 2. Spreading the Gospel of the Miracle Cure: Panama's Black Christ Rodney J. Reynolds Chapter 3. Madness and Miracles: Hoping for Healing in Rural Ghana Ursula M. Read Chapter 4. 'Sakawa' Rumours: Occult Internet Fraud and Ghanaian Identity Alice Armstrong Chapter 5. To Heal the Body is to Heal Oneself: The Body as Congregation Isabelle Lange Chapter 6. Addiction and the Duality of the Self in a North American Religio-Therapeutic Community Ellie Reynolds Chapter 7. Religious Conversion and Madness: Contested Territory in the Peruvian Andes David M.R. Orr Chapter 8. Cosmologies of Fear: The Medicalisation of Anxiety in Contemporary Britain Rebecca Lynch Chapter 9. Functionalists and Zombis: Sorcery as Spandrel and Social Rescue Roland Littlewood Chapter 10. Religion and Psychosis: A Common Evolutionary Trajectory? Simon Dein Index
Acknowledgements Introduction: Divinity, Disease, Distress Roland Littlewood and Rebecca Lynch Chapter 1. Why Animism Matters David Napier Chapter 2. Spreading the Gospel of the Miracle Cure: Panama's Black Christ Rodney J. Reynolds Chapter 3. Madness and Miracles: Hoping for Healing in Rural Ghana Ursula M. Read Chapter 4. 'Sakawa' Rumours: Occult Internet Fraud and Ghanaian Identity Alice Armstrong Chapter 5. To Heal the Body is to Heal Oneself: The Body as Congregation Isabelle Lange Chapter 6. Addiction and the Duality of the Self in a North American Religio-Therapeutic Community Ellie Reynolds Chapter 7. Religious Conversion and Madness: Contested Territory in the Peruvian Andes David M.R. Orr Chapter 8. Cosmologies of Fear: The Medicalisation of Anxiety in Contemporary Britain Rebecca Lynch Chapter 9. Functionalists and Zombis: Sorcery as Spandrel and Social Rescue Roland Littlewood Chapter 10. Religion and Psychosis: A Common Evolutionary Trajectory? Simon Dein Index
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