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"This book is a fabulous read--ethnographically rich, theoretically
engaged, and emotionally and intellectually captivating. The first
major ethnographic study of its kind, the text is very clearly
written and accessible. Hyde does a majestic job of drawing the
reader into the places and practices described, bringing to
stunning life the politics of AIDS on a border region."--Ralph
Litzinger, author of "Other Chinas: The Yao and the Politics of
National Belonging"
""Eating Spring Rice" is a poignant analysis and welcomed
contribution to both China Studies and to the analysis of public
health in the context of the evolution of an AIDS epidemic. As a
public health practitioner and anthropologist, Sandra Hyde has a
keen eye and makes a compelling case for what might be done to
improve the health of individuals. Hyde shows how the particular
modes that social liberalization takes in China will have
unforseeable consequences, offering a vivid picture that requires
us to rethink public health and epidemics in radically new
ways."--Cindy Patton, author of "Globalizing AIDS"
"Sandra Hyde brings the fruits of a decade of intensive engagement
in China's Yunnan province to this beautifully crafted account of
the everyday practices by which AIDS and its social imaginary
remake ethnicity, region, gender, and governance. Bridging medical
anthropology and public health, and debates on the organization of
sex work and on the Chinese politics of race and place, "Eating
Spring Rice" should be required reading for anyone who would
address the impact of emergent plague measures (SARS, avian flu) in
China or elsewhere"--Lawrence Cohen, author of "No Aging in India:
Alzheimer's, The Bad Family, andOther Modern Things"
"Sandra Hyde's analysis of gender, class, language, and cultural
politics is as trenchant as her challenge to China-centrism is
timely. A remarkable critical accomplishment."--Rey Chow, Andrew W.
Mellon Professor of the Humanities, Brown University
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Postcolonial Disorders (Paperback)
Mary-Jo DelVecchio DelVecchio Good, Sandra Teresa Hyde, Sarah Pinto, Byron Good
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R1,167
Discovery Miles 11 670
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The essays in this volume reflect on the nature of subjectivity in
the diverse places where anthropologists work at the beginning of
the twenty-first century. Contributors explore everyday modes of
social and psychological experience, the constitution of the
subject, and forms of subjection that shape the lives of Basque
youth, Indonesian artists, members of nongovernmental HIV/AIDS
programs in China and the Republic of Congo, psychiatrists and the
mentally ill in Morocco and Ireland, and persons who have suffered
trauma or been displaced by violence in the Middle East and in
South and Southeast Asia.
"Painting on book jacket by Entang Wiharso"
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