Medical Marginality in South Asia: Situating Subaltern Therapeutics
David Hardiman is Professor in the Department of History at the University of Warwick, UK. His research interests include the Indian peasantry, tribal movements in India, medical history, and Gandhi and nonviolent resistance.Projit Bihari Mukharji is Assistant Professor in the Department of History and Sociology of Science, the University of Pennsylvania, USA. His research interests include subaltern sciences, everyday technologies, vernacularized "western" sciences and modernized "indigenous" knowledge traditions in South Asia.
- Hardcover: 216 pages
- Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition (July 2 2012)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0415502411
- ISBN-13: 978-0415502412
Examining the world of popular healing in South Asia, this book looks
at the way that it is marginalised by the state and medical
establishment while at the same time being very important in the
everyday lives of the poor. It describes and analyses a world of
‘subaltern therapeutics’ that both interacts with and resists
state-sanctioned and elite forms of medical practice. The relationship
is seen as both a historical as well as ongoing one.
Focusing on
those who exist and practice in the shadow of statist medicine, the
book discusses the many ways in which they try to heal a range of
maladies, and how they experience their marginality. The contributors
also provide a history of such therapeutics, in the process challenging
the widespread belief that such ‘traditional’ therapeutics are
relatively static and unchanging. In focusing on these problems of
transition, they open up one of the central concerns of subaltern
historiography. This is an important contribution to the history of
medicine and society, and subaltern and South Asian studies.
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