Illness, biomedicine, and alternative healing in Brittany, France

E Badone - Medical Anthropology, 2008 - Taylor & Francis
Medical Anthropology, 2008Taylor & Francis
Through the lens of an illness narrative, this article focuses on the complex relationships
between biomedicine and alternative therapies in Brittany, France. Themes drawn from the
illness narrative highlight Breton ideas about the body, the source of healers' legitimacy, and
the authority of the biomedical system. I argue that in this region, both biomedical and
religious authorities are perceived to be allied to non-local elites, and both are subject to
antagonistic criticism. Nonetheless, resistance to biomedicine through recourse to …
Through the lens of an illness narrative, this article focuses on the complex relationships between biomedicine and alternative therapies in Brittany, France. Themes drawn from the illness narrative highlight Breton ideas about the body, the source of healers' legitimacy, and the authority of the biomedical system. I argue that in this region, both biomedical and religious authorities are perceived to be allied to non-local elites, and both are subject to antagonistic criticism. Nonetheless, resistance to biomedicine through recourse to alternative therapies is mixed with ongoing dependence on the biomedical system, since patients seek strategic combinations of both systems to maximize health and other benefits. Pursuing alternative therapies empowers patients by enabling them to negotiate treatment options and to choose among competing narrative constructions of illness. By highlighting parallels between the Breton material and published work based elsewhere in Europe and North America, I argue that this case study has useful implications for anthropologists and medical practitioners working in broader Western contexts.
Taylor & Francis Online
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果