58 research outputs found
Loveâs Imperfection: Moral becoming, friendship and family life
This paper concerns friendship as an aspect of family love and its fragilities. I explore love as an on-going ethical demand and problem in family life, one that can present continual obstacles to the ability to continue as a family. I also look at intra-family friendship as a means for addressing such threats. Drawing upon long-term fieldwork among African American families caring for children with chronic illnesses and disabilities (Mattingly 2010a), I explore a situation faced by one of these families when a household accident badly injures one of the children. Although I examine a family rupture, I part company with the widely held view in anthropology that the properly moral (or ethical) needs to be radically contrasted with the ordinary. Rather, I argue that the ordinary can provide resources for what Stanley Cavell calls âmoral transcendenceâ.
Keywords: ethics, anthropology of morality, Cavell, kinship, love, friendship,moral psycholog
Den narrative udvikling i nyere medicinsk antropologi
I midten af 1980erne begyndte antropologer at undersÞge det narrative og dets relation til lidelse og helbredelse i biomedicinsk behandlings kontekst. Denne narrative udvikling giver antropologer mulighed for at udforske lidelse fra forskellige perpektiver, for at kriti-sere vestlig biomedicin og for at undersÞge de skjulte krÊfter i biomedicinens praksis. Denne artikel skitserer fem vigtige omrÄder, hvor det narrative er blevet sat i forbindelse med helbredelse i vestlig biomedicin. Ud fra analyse af en konkret klinisk interaktion argu-menteres for, at en undersÞgelse af narrativ handling giver antro-pologer et godt udgangspunkt for at deltage i det bredere tvÊr-faglige anliggende at gÞre biomedicinsk diskurs og praksis mere men-neskelig
Kronisk hjemmearbejde. Sociale hÄb, dilemmaer og konflikter i hjemmearbejdsnarrativer i Uganda, Danmark og USA
Med udgangspunkt i tre cases fra henholdsvis Uganda, Danmark og USA diskuterer vi i
denne artikel patienters og pÄrÞrendes hjemmearbejde i forhold til kroniske tilstande. De
tre cases omhandler en aidspatient i et âHome Based Aids Careâ program, der modtager
medicinsk behandling og rÄdgivning i hjemmet, en diabetes patient der prÞver at gennemfÞre
livsstilsforandringer i sin hverdag og en far med et kronisk sygt barn, der forventes
at udfÞre genoptrÊningsÞvelser derhjemme. Vi undersÞger disse tre eksempler pÄ kronisk
hjemmearbejde med narrative begreber for at fremhĂŠve aspekter omkring tid â isĂŠr fremtid
og hÄb. Hjemmearbejdsnarrativer vedrÞrer de forventninger behandlere, patienter og familier
har til den behandling, der er ivĂŠrksat i en klinisk kontekst, og som skal udfolde sig,
nÄr den bringes hjem.
I artiklen diskuterer vi hvordan patienter oplever og hÄndterer dilemmaer i arbejdsog
ansvarsfordelingen mellem hospital og hjem. Vi foreslÄr, at hjemmearbejde indebÊrer
komplekse problemstillinger for bÄde patienter og professionelle. Vi peger specifikt pÄ de
tidslige og sociale dimensioner af hjemmearbejde og pÄ de dilemmaer, som patienter og familier
oplever nÄr de forsÞger at udfÞre deres hjemmearbejde. Vi belyser ogsÄ, hvordan der
kan opstÄ konflikter mellem patienters og professionelles hjemmearbejdsnarrativer. Hjemmearbejde
foregÄr i det, Kleinman kaldte den folkelige sektor, og afslutningsvis stiller vi
spĂžrgsmĂ„let om, hvorvidt hjemmearbejde peger pĂ„ en âekspertdrevetâ kolonisering af den
folkelige sektor
âA Massive Long Wayâ: Interconnecting Histories, a âSpecial Child,â ADHD, and Everyday Family Life
Focusing on one family from a study of dual-earner middle-class families carried out in Los Angeles, California, this article draws on interview and video-recorded data of everyday interactions to explore illness and healing as embedded in the microcultural context of the Morris family. For this family, an important aspect of what is at stake for them in their daily lives is best understood by focusing on 9-year-old Mark, who has been diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). In this article, we grapple with the complexity of conveying some sense of how Markâs condition is experienced and relationally enacted in everyday contexts. Through illuminating connections between lives as lived and lives as told, we explore the narrative structuring of healing in relation to Markâs local moral world with the family at its center. We examine how his parents understand the moral consequences of the childâs past for his present and future, and work to encourage others to give due weight to his troubled beginnings before this child joined the Morris family. At the same time, we see how the Morris parents act to structure Markâs moral experience and orient to a desired future in which Markâs âsuccessâ includes an appreciation of how he is accountable to others for his actions. Through our analyses, we also seek to contribute to discussions on what is at stake in everyday life contexts for children with ADHD and their families, through illuminating aspects of the cultural, moral and relational terrain that U.S. families navigate in contending with a childâs diagnosis of ADHD. Further, given that ADHD is often construed as a âdisorder of volition,â we seek to advance anthropological theorizing about the will in situations where volitional control over behavior is seen to be disordered
Giving an Account of Oneâs Pain in the Anthropological Interview
In this paper, I analyze the illness stories narrated by a mother and her 13-year-old son as part of an ethnographic study of child chronic pain sufferers and their families. In examining some of the moral, relational and communicative challenges of giving an account of oneâs pain, I focus on what is left out of some accounts of illness and suffering and explore some possible reasons for these elisions. Drawing on recent work by Judith Butler (Giving an Account of Oneself, 2005), I investigate how the pragmatic context of interviews can introduce a form of symbolic violence to narrative accounts. Specifically, I use the term âgenre of complaintâ to highlight how anthropological research interviews in biomedical settings invoke certain typified forms of suffering that call for the rectification of perceived injustices. Interview narratives articulated in the genre of complaint privilege specific types of pain and suffering and cast others into the background. Giving an account of oneâs pain is thus a strategic and selective process, creating interruptions and silences as much as moments of clarity. Therefore, I argue that medical anthropologists ought to attend more closely to the institutional structures and relations that shape the production of illness narratives in interview encounters
Accounting for oneself and other ethical acts: Big picture ethics with a small picture focus
Comment on Keane, Webb. 2016. Ethical life: Its natural and social histories. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
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