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Reimagining Social Medicine from the South Abigail H. Neely

Reimagining Social Medicine from the South By Abigail H. Neely

Reimagining Social Medicine from the South by Abigail H. Neely


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Summary

Abigail H. Neely explores social medicine's possibilities and limitations at one of its most important origin sites: the Pholela Community Health Centre (PCHC) in South Africa.

Reimagining Social Medicine from the South Summary

Reimagining Social Medicine from the South by Abigail H. Neely

In Reimagining Social Medicine from the South, Abigail H. Neely explores social medicine's possibilities and limitations at one of its most important origin sites: the Pholela Community Health Centre (PCHC) in South Africa. The PCHC's focus on medical and social factors of health yielded remarkable success. And yet South Africa's systemic racial inequality hindered health center work, and witchcraft illnesses challenged a program rooted in the sciences. To understand Pholela's successes and failures, Neely interrogates the social in social medicine. She makes clear that the social sciences the PCHC used failed to account for the roles that Pholela's residents and their environment played in the development and success of its program. At the same time, the PCHC's reliance on biomedicine prevented it from recognizing the impact on health of witchcraft illnesses and the social relationships from which they emerged. By rewriting the story of social medicine from Pholela, Neely challenges global health practitioners to recognize the multiple worlds and actors that shape health and healing in Africa and beyond.

Reimagining Social Medicine from the South Reviews

Compelling and original, Reimagining Social Medicine from the South rethinks core concepts in historical and anthropological discussions of health and healing in Africa through the lenses of political ecology and relational ontologies. Drawing on rich ethnographic and archival examples, Abigail H. Neely illuminates how robust conceptions of the 'social' at the heart of a pioneering social medicine project in rural South Africa nonetheless struggled to incorporate more-than-human understandings of life and well-being. The book's insistence that health and illness are entanglements that exceed the confines of the individual body and academic renderings of the 'social' alike is a call for place-based models for improving health that challenge global health's narrow frames of measurability and efficacy. -- Cal Biruk, author of * Cooking Data: Culture and Politics in an African Research World *
It is not easy to develop an analysis that incorporates both racial capitalism and witchcraft, but through her deeply respectful ethnographic examination of the work of a groundbreaking and highly influential health clinic in South Africa, Abigail H. Neely manages to do just that. Her penultimate chapter is a phenomenal rendition of the multiple ontologies of health. -- Julie Guthman, author of * Wilted: Pathogens, Chemicals and the Fragile Future of the Strawberry Industry *

About Abigail H. Neely

Abigail H. Neely is Assistant Professor of Geography at Dartmouth College.

Table of Contents

Preface ix
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction. Telling the Story of Social Medicine from Pholela 1
1. Seeing Like a Health Center 17
2. Relationships and Social Medicine 41
3. Nutrition, Science, and Racial Capitalism 58
4. Witchcraft and the Limits of Social Medicine 79
Conclusion. Social Medicine in the Age of Global Health 99
Glossary 105
Notes 107
Bibliography 147
Index 163

Additional information

NGR9781478014270
9781478014270
147801427X
Reimagining Social Medicine from the South by Abigail H. Neely
New
Paperback
Duke University Press
2021-08-27
192
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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