剩余的

Q4 Medicine
Anila Daulatzai
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管有许多针对阿富汗寡妇和海洛因吸食者的援助项目,但喀布尔的寡妇和海洛因吸食者阿伊莎并没有得到人道主义援助,也没有参加戒毒治疗项目。这一章着眼于艾莎在阿富汗连续战争中生活中出现的亲属关系——她与另一位照顾她的寡妇的关系,她与更广泛的朋友网络的关系,以及她对海洛因的依赖。阿富汗历经近四十年的连续战争后所处的状态(haalat, situation, condition),在这里被视为一个分析范畴,用以扰乱成瘾的病因,并批判自由主义者对适应力的想象。通过对艾莎案例的民族志探索,本章要求我们考虑战争和人道主义对那些反复遭受战争的人的健康的影响,以及在阿富汗形成的对生活的各种依恋模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Remaining Undone
Despite numerous aid programs targeting both widows and heroin users in Afghanistan, a widow and heroin user in Kabul, Aisha, does not receive humanitarian aid and is not part of an addiction treatment program. This chapter looks at forms of kinship that emerge in Aisha’s life amidst serial war in Afghanistan—her relationship to another widow who cares for her, to a wider network of friends, and to heroin. The haalat (situation, condition) of Afghanistan of serial war spanning almost four decades is taken here as an analytical category to unsettle etiologies of addiction, and to critique liberal imaginaries of resilience. By ethnographically exploring the case of Aisha, this chapter asks us to consider the effects of war and humanitarianism on the health of those repeatedly subjected to it and the varied modes of attachment to life that are forged in Afghanistan.
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来源期刊
Iranian Journal of War and Public Health
Iranian Journal of War and Public Health Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
16 weeks
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