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In Lifelines Harris Solomon takes readers into the trauma ward of
one of Mumbai's busiest public hospitals, narrating the stories of
the patients, providers, and families who experience and care for
traumatic injuries due to widespread traffic accidents. He traces
trauma's moves after the accident: from scenes of road and railway
injuries to ambulance interiors; through emergency triage, surgery,
and intensive care; and from the morgue for patients who do not
survive into the homes of those who do. These pathways reveal how
trauma shifts inequalities, infrastructures, and institutions
through the lives and labors of clinical spaces. Solomon contends
that medicine itself must be understood in terms of lifelines:
patterns of embodied movement that determine survival. In
reflecting on the centrality of traffic to life, Lifelines explores
a fundamental question: How does medicine move us?
In Lifelines Harris Solomon takes readers into the trauma ward of
one of Mumbai's busiest public hospitals, narrating the stories of
the patients, providers, and families who experience and care for
traumatic injuries due to widespread traffic accidents. He traces
trauma's moves after the accident: from scenes of road and railway
injuries to ambulance interiors; through emergency triage, surgery,
and intensive care; and from the morgue for patients who do not
survive into the homes of those who do. These pathways reveal how
trauma shifts inequalities, infrastructures, and institutions
through the lives and labors of clinical spaces. Solomon contends
that medicine itself must be understood in terms of lifelines:
patterns of embodied movement that determine survival. In
reflecting on the centrality of traffic to life, Lifelines explores
a fundamental question: How does medicine move us?
The popular narrative of "globesity" posits that the adoption of
Western diets is intensifying obesity and diabetes in the Global
South and that disordered metabolisms are the embodied consequence
of globalization and excess. In Metabolic Living Harris Solomon
recasts these narratives by examining how people in Mumbai, India,
experience the porosity between food, fat, the body, and the city.
Solomon contends that obesity and diabetes pose a problem of
absorption between body and environment. Drawing on ethnographic
fieldwork carried out in Mumbai's home kitchens, metabolic disorder
clinics, food companies, markets, and social services, he details
the absorption of everything from snack foods and mangoes to
insulin, stress, and pollutants. As these substances pass between
the city and the body and blur the two domains, the onset and
treatment of metabolic illness raise questions about who has the
power to decide what goes into bodies and when food means life.
Evoking metabolism as a condition of contemporary urban life and a
vital political analytic, Solomon illuminates the lived
predicaments of obesity and diabetes, and reorients our
understanding of chronic illness in India and beyond.
The popular narrative of "globesity" posits that the adoption of
Western diets is intensifying obesity and diabetes in the Global
South and that disordered metabolisms are the embodied consequence
of globalization and excess. In Metabolic Living Harris Solomon
recasts these narratives by examining how people in Mumbai, India,
experience the porosity between food, fat, the body, and the city.
Solomon contends that obesity and diabetes pose a problem of
absorption between body and environment. Drawing on ethnographic
fieldwork carried out in Mumbai's home kitchens, metabolic disorder
clinics, food companies, markets, and social services, he details
the absorption of everything from snack foods and mangoes to
insulin, stress, and pollutants. As these substances pass between
the city and the body and blur the two domains, the onset and
treatment of metabolic illness raise questions about who has the
power to decide what goes into bodies and when food means life.
Evoking metabolism as a condition of contemporary urban life and a
vital political analytic, Solomon illuminates the lived
predicaments of obesity and diabetes, and reorients our
understanding of chronic illness in India and beyond.
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