Embodied Protests – Emotions and Women`s Health in Bolivia
Emotions and Women's Health in Bolivia
Series: Interp Culture New Millennium; 64;
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Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
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Product details:
- Edition number 1st Edition
- Publisher MO – University of Illinois Press
- Date of Publication 27 May 2015
- Number of Volumes Hardback
- ISBN 9780252039171
- Binding Hardback
- See also 9780252080746
- No. of pages176 pages
- Size 230x176x16 mm
- Weight 410 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 4 black and white photographs, 1 map 0
Categories
Long description:
Embodied Protests examines how Bolivia's hesitant courtship with globalization manifested in the visceral and emotional diseases that afflicted many Bolivian women. Drawing on case studies conducted among market- and working-class women in the provincial town of Punata, Maria Tapias examines how headaches and debilidad, so-called normal bouts of infant diarrhea, and the malaise oppressing whole communities were symptomatic of profound social suffering. She approaches the narratives of distress caused by poverty, domestic violence, and the failure of social networks as constituting the knowledge that shaped their understandings of well-being. At the crux of Tapias's definitive analysis is the idea that individual health perceptions, actions, and practices cannot be separated from local cultural narratives or from global and economic forces.
Evocative and compassionate, Embodied Protests gives voice to the human costs of the ongoing neoliberal experiment.
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