风险的多感官感知:厄瓜多尔皮肤利什曼病相关污名背后的美学。

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Anthropology & Medicine Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-08 DOI:10.1080/13648470.2023.2259184
Veronica C Vargas Roman, Jacob Bezemer, Manuel Calvopiña, Fernando Ortega, Noel B Salazar, Henk D F H Schallig, Henry J C de Vries
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引用次数: 0

摘要

先前对皮肤利什曼病(一种媒介传播的寄生虫病)相关污名化的研究主要集中在审美外表的做作上,认为这是污名化产生的主要原因。然而,亚马逊-厄瓜多尔腹地的土著居民通过识别(粘膜)皮肤利什曼病,主要是通过非典型气味,然后是奇怪的声音、外观和味道,从而引发污名化表达。这种识别症状的经验方式依赖于识别疾病的具体形式,与西方视觉至上主义形成对比,并要求通过多感官人类学来理解。通过人种学研究和从83次半结构化访谈和7个厄瓜多尔民族(包括亚马逊地区的6个土著民族)的15个焦点小组中检索的数据,本文分析了感觉器是如何成为健康温度计的。研究结果表明,对危险感、传染感和社会(自我)排斥的不同文化反应,被理解为污名化的表达,与土著人民共享的健康(或福祉)的整体方法有关。在森林社会中,幸福是通过成功的(非)人际关系来解释的,而疾病则渗透到缺乏平衡关系的身体中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Multi-sensorial perceptions of risk: the aesthetics behind (muco)cutaneous leishmaniasis-related stigma in Ecuador.

Previous research on the stigma associated with cutaneous leishmaniasis, a vector-transmitted parasitic disease, focuses on aesthetic appearance affectation as the leading cause of stigmatisation. However, Indigenous populations in the hinterland of Amazonian Ecuador trigger stigma expressions by recognising (muco)cutaneous leishmaniasis, primarily through atypical smell, followed by the odd voice sound, appearance and taste. This empirical way of recognising symptoms relies on embodied forms of identifying a disease, contrasting the Western supremacy of visuality and demanding to be understood via multi-sensorial anthropology. Through ethnographic research and data retrieved from eighty-three semistructured interviews and fifteen focus groups in seven Ecuadorian ethnic groups - including six Indigenous groups in the Amazon region - this paper analyses how the sensorium is a health thermometer. Findings reveal that differentiated cultural responses to a sense of peril, contagion and social (self)rejection, understood as stigma expressions, are linked to the holistic approach to health (or well-being) shared by Indigenous populations. In forest societies, well-being is explained through successful (non-)human relationships, and disease permeates through bodies that lack balanced relations.

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CiteScore
2.90
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