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Affliction: Health, Disease, Poverty (Forms of Living) PDF

268 Pages·2005·2.3 MB·English
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Copyright © 2015 Fordham University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other— except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher. Fordham University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party Internet websites referred to in this publication and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate. Fordham University Press also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. Visit us online at www.fordhampress.com. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Das, Veena, author. Affliction : health, disease, poverty / Veena Das. — First edition. p. ; cm. — (Forms of living) Includes bibliographical references and index. Summary: “Affliction: Health, Disease, Poverty inaugurates a novel way of understanding the trajectories of health and disease in the context of poverty. It traces the unfolding of illness within families, local communities, neighborhood markets and in occult worlds. Privileging the experience of people living in these neighborhoods it asks how can global health be made to take this experience into account rather than escape from it?” — Provided by publisher. ISBN 978-0-8232-6180-2 (cloth) — ISBN 978-0-8232-6181-9 (paper) I. Title. II. Series: Forms of living. [DNLM: 1. Delivery of Health Care—India. 2. Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice—India. 3. Culture—India. 4. Family—India. 5. Poverty—India. 6. Stress, Psychological—India. W 84 JI4] RA418.5.P6 362.1086’942—dc23 2014030233 Printed in the United States of America 17 16 15 5 4 3 2 1 First edition For Arthur Kleinman and Talal Asad With whom my agreement runs much deeper than agreement in opinions. Thank you for your friendship. CONTENTS Acknowledgments Affliction: An Introduction 1. How the Body Speaks 2. A Child Learns Illness and Learns Death 3. Mental Illness, Psychiatric Institutions, and the Singularity of Lives 4. Dangerous Liaisons: Technology, Kinship, and Wild Spirits 5. The Reluctant Healer and the Darkness of Our Times 6. Medicines, Markets, and Healing 7. Global Health Discourse and the View from Planet Earth Conclusion: Thoughts for the Day after Tomorrow References Index ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This book was written over many years in small bits and pieces that came together for me only recently. My main concern has been to understand “what is going on” in the low-income neighborhoods in Delhi where I have worked in different capacities for several years. I thank the following for their generosity in sharing their lives and their thoughts and for letting me benefit from their ungrudging criticisms and support. To the people in the seven urban neighborhoods described here and to those in the three others that were added later—you have given me reason to believe in anthropology and in my capacity for friendship. To the ISERDD members—Charu Nanda, Purshottam, Geeta, Rajan Singh, and Simi Chaturvedi—your work and dedication sustains our common endeavor, and your fierce commitment to the possibility of doing something for those whom you meet in the course of your work is life-giving. To Devinder, Bablu, Varun, Anand, and Roopa—and also to Pushpa and Zargham—thank you for cheerfully accomplishing the various tasks that made the work at ISERDD a pleasure. To my colleagues at Johns Hopkins University and to our graduate students —I thank you for sustaining a serious intellectual life despite all the travails of the past few years. To Clara Han, Naveeda Khan, and Aaron Goodfellow—thank you for the care with which you have read some of these chapters and for your astute comments. To Ranendra Das, Jishnu Das, and Jeffrey Hammer—thank you for your openness to anthropology, which has permitted me, in turn, to be open to certain forms of economic reasoning. To Saumya Das and Christiana Iyasere—thanks for clarifying my queries on medical matters and being ever ready to engage even when we have vigorous disagreements. To Sanmay Das—I am ever grateful for the gentle way in which you raise questions—they are never bouncers but rather like googlies that are oh-so- beautiful. To Manoj Mohanan, Brian Chan, Diana Tabak, Nomita Divi, and Grant Miller—my gratitude for your active participation and enthusiasm for training the next generation from different walks of life. To Yasmeen Arif, Aditya Bharadwaj, Rita Brara, Pratiksha Baxi, Janet Carsten, Roma Chatterji, Christopher Davis, Didier Fassin, Paola Maratti, Deepak Mehta, Michael Moon, Sylvain Perdigon, Shalini Randeria, Bhrigupati Singh, and, Jonathan Spencer—thank you for your engagement with my work. The discussions with each of you over the themes explored here took place in various settings—in a kitchen, a café, a classroom, during a walk, in a seminar room, on the phone—but each discussion left an indelible mark. To the four anonymous reviewers for the Press—I thank you for the care with which you read the manuscript and your criticisms, which were crucial to my revisions of the text. I hope you recognize your imprint on the final text. To the Institute of Advanced Study, Paris, thank you for a fellowship in 2009 and the opportunity to present my work in several thought-provoking sessions, and to Claude Imbert and Carlo Severi for helping me fine-tune the philosophical implications of my arguments. To Anne Lovell, Stefania Pandolfo, Sandra Laugier, Pierre-Henri Castel, and Richard Rechtman—your generosity in sustaining discussions on the theme of madness has been crucial for me to think of the ordinary in new ways. To the participants in the Critical Global Health Seminar—thank you for the opportunity to look at themes in global health from a fresh perspective. To the graduate students in my proseminar class in 2013—Ghazal Asif, Swayam Bagaria, Önder Çelik, and Mac Skelton—thank you for the semester- long discussion that is reflected in several chapters of the book. To Andrew Brandel—thank for your intellectual enthusiasm as well as for your help with the logistics of bringing the book to completion. To the members of the Governing Board of ISERDD—Ranendra Das, Roma Chatterji, Kuriakose Mamkoottam, Amitabh Mukhopadyay, Deepak Mehta— thank you for your vigilance and your support. To the staff of Fordham University Press and especially Thomas Lay, Eric Newman, and Teresa Jesionowski—I thank you for your careful editing and attention to detail. It is a treat to work with you. To the late Helen Tartar—your words echo and echo in more ways than I can say. I miss your delicacy of touch. To the late Harry Marks, whose presence at Johns Hopkins was like the pure gift—I thank you for the most memorable discussions on whichever subject our fancy took us to. To Audrey Cantlie, who sadly passed away in the ninety-first year of her life when she was in the middle of writing a book on Wilfred Bion and Jacques Lacan—your intellectual spirit and your love for learning have sustained me since we first met in 1978. I was blessed to have your friendship. To Nayan, Lucas, Uma, Ayla, Lalita, Kiran, and Uma Jaan—thank you for just being there. Finally to Stanley Cavell—your words live in my work in whatever way I can receive them—they give it life. The author wishes to acknowledge the following publishers for generously granting permission to reproduce revised versions of chapters originally published in their respective journals and books and to co-authors for agreeing to let me publish the papers jointly written under my name. “How the Body Speaks” (chapter 1) is a revised version of the chapter written jointly with Ranendra K. Das titled “How the Body Speaks: Illness and Lifeworld among the Urban Poor.” In Subjectivity: Ethnographic Investigations, edited by João Biehl, Byron Good, and Arthur Kleinman, 66– 97. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007. “Mental Illness, Psychiatric Institutions, and the Singularity of Life” (chapter 3) is a revised version of “Mental illness and the Urban Poor: Psychiatric Institutions and the Singularity of Life” (written with the assistance of Rajan Bhandari and Simi Bajaj), published in Enchantments of Modernity: Empire, Nation, Globalization, edited by Saurabh Dube, 402–28. New Delhi: Rout-ledge, 2009. “Dangerous Liaisons: Technology, Kinship, and Wild Spirits” (chapter 4) is a revised version of “The Life of Humans and the Life of Roaming Spirits,” published in Rethinking the Human, edited by J. Michelle Molina and Donald. K. Swearer, 31–50. Cambridge, Mass.: Center for the Study of World Religions, Harvard Divinity School, 2010. “The Reluctant Healer and the Darkness of Our Times” (chapter 5) was previously published as “The Dreamed Guru: The Entangled Lives of the Amil and the Anthropologist,” in The Guru in South Asia, edited by Jacob Copeman and Aya Ikegama, 133–55. Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 2012. Veena Das Delhi, 2013

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