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Traditional medicine enjoys widespread appeal in today's Russia, an
appeal that has often been framed either as a holdover from
pre-Soviet times or as the symptom of capitalist growing pains and
vanishing Soviet modes of life. Mixing Medicines seeks to
reconsider these logics of emptiness and replenishment. Set in
Buryatia, a semi-autonomous indigenous republic in Southeastern
Siberia, the book offers an ethnography of the institutionalization
of Tibetan medicine, a botanically-based therapeutic practice
framed as at once foreign, international, and local to Russia's
Buddhist regions. By highlighting the cosmopolitan nature of
Tibetan medicine and the culturally specific origins of
biomedicine, the book shows how people in Buryatia trouble
entrenched center-periphery models, complicating narratives about
isolation and political marginality. Chudakova argues that a
therapeutic life mediated through the practices of traditional
medicines is not a last-resort response to sociopolitical
abandonment but depends on a densely collective mingling of human
and non-human worlds that produces new senses of rootedness, while
reshaping regional and national conversations about care, history,
and belonging.
Traditional medicine enjoys widespread appeal in today's Russia, an
appeal that has often been framed either as a holdover from
pre-Soviet times or as the symptom of capitalist growing pains and
vanishing Soviet modes of life. Mixing Medicines seeks to
reconsider these logics of emptiness and replenishment. Set in
Buryatia, a semi-autonomous indigenous republic in Southeastern
Siberia, the book offers an ethnography of the institutionalization
of Tibetan medicine, a botanically-based therapeutic practice
framed as at once foreign, international, and local to Russia's
Buddhist regions. By highlighting the cosmopolitan nature of
Tibetan medicine and the culturally specific origins of
biomedicine, the book shows how people in Buryatia trouble
entrenched center-periphery models, complicating narratives about
isolation and political marginality. Chudakova argues that a
therapeutic life mediated through the practices of traditional
medicines is not a last-resort response to sociopolitical
abandonment but depends on a densely collective mingling of human
and non-human worlds that produces new senses of rootedness, while
reshaping regional and national conversations about care, history,
and belonging.
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