ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Berghahn Books
FORMAT: Paperback
ISBN: 9781789200621
RRP: £21.00
PAGES: 220
PUBLICATION DATE:
August 1, 2018
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Cosmos, Gods and Madmen: Frameworks in the Anthropologies of Medicine
Roland Littlewood
Rebecca Lynch
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.
Reviews of Cosmos, Gods and Madmen: Frameworks in the Anthropologies of Medicine
"The essays in Cosmos, Gods, and Madmen range over a wide array of topics across multiple geographic areas… Not all of the chapters touch on all three of the terms in the book's title, but they all contain important and fascinating ethnographic material and make some useful theoretical and methodological recommendations. It will not be news to any anthropologists that religion and supernatural agency is frequently implicated in the diagnosis and cure of illness, mental or otherwise, but the case studies are a welcome addition to the literature on medical anthropology and the anthropology of religion." Anthropology Review Database
Roland Littlewood
Roland Littlewood is Professor of Anthropology and Psychiatry at UCL. He is a former president of the RAI and has undertaken fieldwork in Trinidad, Haiti, Lebanon, Italy and Albania, and has published eight books and around 200 papers.Rebecca Lynch is a Research Fellow in Medical Anthropology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM). Her work crosses the intersection of medicine and religion and she has published on cultural and scientific constructions of health, the body and morality. She has conducted fieldwork in Trinidad and the UK and is a Research Associate at Lucy Cavendish College Cambridge.