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Patients and Healers in the Context of Culture
A01=Arthur Kleinman
academic training
anthropological studies
anthropology
Author_Arthur Kleinman
Category=JBFM
chinese culture
clinical care
clinical interviews
clinical perspective
consultation psychiatry
cross cultural
cross cultural psychiatry
cross cultural teaching
culture
east asia
eq_bestseller
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography
field research
health
health justice
health studies
healthcare
history of medicine
medical
medical anthropology
medical history
medicine
mental health
mental health project
psychiatry
psychology
social culture
social science
taiwan
theoretical framework
Product details
- ISBN 9780520045118
- Weight: 590g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 17 Aug 1981
- Publisher: University of California Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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From the Preface, by Arthur Kleinman:Patients and Healers in the Context of Culture presents a theoretical framework for studying the relationship between medicine, psychiatry, and culture. That framework is principally illustrated by materials gathered in field research in Taiwan and, to a lesser extent, from materials gathered in similar research in Boston. The reader will find this book contains a dialectical tension between two reciprocally related orientations: it is both a cross-cultural (largely anthropological) perspective on the essential components of clinical care and a clinical perspective on anthropological studies of medicine and psychiatry. That dialectic is embodied in my own academic training and professional life, so that this book is a personal statement. I am a psychiatrist trained in anthropology. I have worked in library, field, and clinic on problems concerning medicine and psychiatry in Chinese culture. I teach cross-cultural psychiatry and medical anthropology, but I also practice and teach consultation psychiatry and take a clinical approach to my major cross-cultural teaching and research involvements.
The theoretical framework elaborated in this book has been applied to all of those areas; in turn, they are used to illustrate the theory. Both the theory and its application embody the same dialectic. The purpose of this book is to advance both poles of that dialectic: to demonstrate the critical role of social science (especially anthropology and cross-cultural studies) in clinical medicine and psychiatry and to encourage study of clinical problems by anthropologists and other investigators involved in cross-cultural research.
Arthur Michael Kleinman, M.D. is Professor of Medical Anthropology in the Department of Social Medicine at Harvard University.
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