The SámiIndigenous people of northernmost Europehave relied on Traditional Healing methods over generations. This pioneering volume documents, in accessible language, local healing traditions and demonstrates the effectiveness of using the resources local communities can provide. This collection of essays by ten experts also records how ancient healing traditions and modern health-care systems have worked together, and sometimes competed, to provide solutions for local problems. Idioms of Sámi Health and Healing is one of the first English-language studies of the Traditional Healing methods among the Sámi, and offers valuable insight and academic context to those in the fields of anthropology, medical anthropology, transcultural psychiatry, and circumpolar studies. Idioms of Sámi Health and Healing is the second volume in the Patterns of Northern Traditional Healing series. Foreword by David G. Anderson. Contributors: Kjell Birkely Andersen, Anne Karen Hætta, Mona Anita Kiil, Britt Kramvig, Trine Kvitberg, Stein R. Mathisen, Barbara Helen Miller, Marit Myrvoll, Randi Inger Johanne Nymo, Sigvald Persen.
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Product Details
Weight: 365g
Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
Publication Date: 02 Nov 2015
Publisher: University of Alberta Press
Publication City/Country: Canada
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781772120882
About
Barbara Helen Miller PhD in Anthropology from Leiden University (the Netherlands) is currently an independent scholar working in co-operation with the Research Group Circumpolar Cultures. She received the Master of Arts in Psychology of Religion from the Norwich University Vermont College (Montpelier Vermont USA) and the Diploma in Analytical Psychology at the C.G. Jung Institute Zürich (Küsnacht Switzerland). Her most widely read publication is Connecting and Correcting A Case Study of Sámi Healers in Porsanger. Leiden: CNWS (2007). Earle H. Waugh is Professor Emeritus and was Director of the Centre for the Centre for Health and Culture in the Department of Family Medicine Faculty of Medicine at the University of Alberta in Edmonton upon his retirement.