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What we eat, how we eat, where we eat, and when we eat are deeply
embedded cultural practices. Eating is also related to how we
medicate. The multimillion-dollar diet industry offers advice on
how to eat for a better body and longer life, and avoiding harmful
foods (or choosing healthy ones) is considered separate from
consuming medicine& mdash;another multimillion-dollar industry.
In contrast, most traditional medical systems view food as
inseparable from medicine and regard medicinal foods as the front
line of healing.
Drawing on medical texts and food therapy practices from around
the world and throughout history, Nancy N. Chen locates old and new
crossovers between food and medicine in different social and
cultural contexts. The consumption of spices, sugar, and salt was
once linked to specific healing properties, and trade in these
commodities transformed not just the political economy of Europe,
Asia, and the New World but local tastes and food practices as
well. Today's technologies are rapidly changing traditional
attitudes toward food, enabling the cultivation of new admixtures,
such as nutraceuticals and genetically modified food, that link
food to medicine in novel ways. Chen considers these developments
against the evolving food regimes of the diet industry in order to
build a framework for understanding diet as individual practice,
social prescription, and political formation.
The charismatic form of healing called qigong, based on
meditative breathing exercises, has achieved enormous popularity in
China during the last two decades. Qigong served a critical social
organizational function, as practitioners formed new informal
networks, sometimes on an international scale, at a time when China
was shifting from state-subsidized medical care to for-profit
market medicine. The emergence of new psychological states deemed
to be deviant led the Chinese state to "medicalize" certain forms
while championing scientific versions of qigong. By contrast,
qigong continues to be promoted outside China as a traditional
healing practice. Breathing Spaces brings to life the narratives of
numerous practitioners, healers, psychiatric patients, doctors, and
bureaucrats, revealing the varied and often dramatic ways they cope
with market reform and social changes in China.
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