In most places on the African continent, multiple health care options exist and patients draw on a therapeutic continuum that ranges from traditional medicine and religious healing to the latest in biomedical technology. The ethnographically based essays in this volume highlight African ways of perceiving sickness, making sense of and treating suffering, and thinking about health care to reveal the range and practice of everyday medicine in Africa through historical, political, and economic contexts.
This volume covers much ground and gives a good orientation to readers who are totally new to the concept of medical pluralism and the range of healing modalities in Africa. I predict this book will be used widely in courses in anthropology, medical anthropology, African studies, and global health.
Introduction by William C. Olsen and Carolyn Sargent
Biomedicine and African Healing:
1. Stacey Langwick: The Value of Secrets: Pragmatic Healers and Proprietary Knowledge
2. William C. Olsen: Body and Sunsum: Stroke in Asante
3. Susan J. Rasmussen: Spirits and Pills Who Are Against Children: Medico-Rituals and Assisted Reproductive Technologies in a Tuareg Couples Quest for Parenthood
4. John M. Janzen: Science in the Moral Space of Health and Healing Paradigms in Western Equatorial Africa
5. Brooke Grundfest Schoepf: Medical Pluralism Revisted: A Memoir
Symptoms and Therapeutic Pluralities:
6. Ulrika Trovalla: Wishful Doing: Journeying in a Nigerian Medical Landscape
7. Koen Stroeken: The Individualization of Illness: Bewitchment and the Mental in Postcolonial Tanzania
8. Christopher C. Taylor: IhahamukaPTSD in Postgenocidal Rwanda: Culture, Continuity and Change in Rwandan Therapeutics
Hospital Ethnography:
9. Elisha Renne: Ear Infections, Malnutrition, and Circuitous Health Care Treatments in Zaria, Nigeria
10. Benson A. Mulemi: Therapeutic Eclecticism and Cancer Care in a Kenyan Hospital Ward
11.CarolҠ