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Breathless : Tuberculosis, Inequality, and Care in Rural India
Publisher:
Navayana
| Author:
Andrew McDowell
| Language:
English
| Format:
Paperback
Publisher:
Navayana
Author:
Andrew McDowell
Language:
English
Format:
Paperback
₹599 ₹389
Save: 35%
In stock
Releases around 05/10/2024Ships within:
This book is on PRE-ORDER, and it will be shipped within 1-4 days after the release of the book.
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Price and release dates of pre-order books may change at the publisher's discretion before release.
In stock
Book Type |
---|
ISBN:
Categories: Health & Fitness, Preorder
Page Extent:
273
Welcome to Ambawati. A village in Rajasthan, midway between Delhi and Mumbai, where the western wind kicks up a dust. It irritates the lungs. The residents are mostly Adivasis and Dalits. Tuberculosis is rampant. It is entangled with inequality. This is the price the marginalized pay for health and policy decisions made in faraway Delhi and Geneva. Andrew McDowell gets entangled in the lives of the people of Ambawati, spending time at tea stalls, clinics, bedsides, fields, forests, and with nurses, doctors, quacks, mediums and mystics. He shows us how TB is an atmospheric illness dictated by social and biological realities.
With chapters on dust, clouds, breath, mud, and ghosts, McDowell develops a philosophy and phenomenology of breathing that attends to medical systems, patient care, and health justice. Breath—intimate and personal, shared and distributed—throws new light on public health and inequality. Breathless is both an act of meditation and a call to action.
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Description
Welcome to Ambawati. A village in Rajasthan, midway between Delhi and Mumbai, where the western wind kicks up a dust. It irritates the lungs. The residents are mostly Adivasis and Dalits. Tuberculosis is rampant. It is entangled with inequality. This is the price the marginalized pay for health and policy decisions made in faraway Delhi and Geneva. Andrew McDowell gets entangled in the lives of the people of Ambawati, spending time at tea stalls, clinics, bedsides, fields, forests, and with nurses, doctors, quacks, mediums and mystics. He shows us how TB is an atmospheric illness dictated by social and biological realities.
With chapters on dust, clouds, breath, mud, and ghosts, McDowell develops a philosophy and phenomenology of breathing that attends to medical systems, patient care, and health justice. Breath—intimate and personal, shared and distributed—throws new light on public health and inequality. Breathless is both an act of meditation and a call to action.
About Author
Andrew McDowell is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana. He has a Ph.D. in sociocultural anthropology from Harvard University. His work has appeared in Medical Anthropology Quarterly, Ethos, Biosocieties, and The Lancet.
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