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Book Synopsis
This book addresses a critical contemporary issue—the worldwide proliferation of pharmaceutical use. The contributors explore questions such as: How are culturally constituted selves transformed by regular ingestion of pharmaceutical drugs? Does "being human" increasingly come to mean not only oriented to drugs but also created and regulated by them? From the standpoint of cultural phenomenology, does this reshape human "being"? An anthropological study that examines both human suffering and its biological realities, Pharmaceutical Self focuses on the social, cultural, and political aspects of the expanding distribution of psychopharmacological drugs.

Trade Review
Pharmaceutical Self plumbs the biosocial complexity inherent in the globalization of psychoactive drugs. The authors, ranking figures in medical anthropology, explore the collision of structural violence poverty, gender inequality, discrimination, and disasters both natural and unnatural and neuropsychiatry, and how social forces become embodied in adverse health outcomes and new subjectivities in psychiatric patients local worlds. The thematic, theoretical, and geographic breadth of this volume with experience-near accounts from settings as different as underresourced clinics in Indonesia to homeless shelters in Chicago provides valuable contributions to the burgeoning anthropology of psychopharmacology. Essential reading for any student of global mental health and for students of public health more generally." —Paul Farmer, Chair, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School

"At the intersection of the growing domains of research on the permanent reinvention of the self and the empire of the drug industry in the contemporary world, Janis Jenkins's edited volume brings together the best specialists of both fields to open the promising territory of an anthropology of psychopharmaceuticals. With its unique global perspective, the book explores the way in which psychotropic medicines against insomnia, depression, or psychosis affect bodies and minds but also transform the moral and political meanings of suffering and trauma." —Didier Fassin, the James D. Wolfensohn Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton)

Pharmaceutical Self: The Global Shaping of

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A Paperback / softback by Janis H. Jenkins

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    View other formats and editions of Pharmaceutical Self: The Global Shaping of by Janis H. Jenkins

    Publisher: SAR Press
    Publication Date: 30/03/2011
    ISBN13: 9781934691380, 978-1934691380
    ISBN10: 1934691380

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    This book addresses a critical contemporary issue—the worldwide proliferation of pharmaceutical use. The contributors explore questions such as: How are culturally constituted selves transformed by regular ingestion of pharmaceutical drugs? Does "being human" increasingly come to mean not only oriented to drugs but also created and regulated by them? From the standpoint of cultural phenomenology, does this reshape human "being"? An anthropological study that examines both human suffering and its biological realities, Pharmaceutical Self focuses on the social, cultural, and political aspects of the expanding distribution of psychopharmacological drugs.

    Trade Review
    Pharmaceutical Self plumbs the biosocial complexity inherent in the globalization of psychoactive drugs. The authors, ranking figures in medical anthropology, explore the collision of structural violence poverty, gender inequality, discrimination, and disasters both natural and unnatural and neuropsychiatry, and how social forces become embodied in adverse health outcomes and new subjectivities in psychiatric patients local worlds. The thematic, theoretical, and geographic breadth of this volume with experience-near accounts from settings as different as underresourced clinics in Indonesia to homeless shelters in Chicago provides valuable contributions to the burgeoning anthropology of psychopharmacology. Essential reading for any student of global mental health and for students of public health more generally." —Paul Farmer, Chair, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School

    "At the intersection of the growing domains of research on the permanent reinvention of the self and the empire of the drug industry in the contemporary world, Janis Jenkins's edited volume brings together the best specialists of both fields to open the promising territory of an anthropology of psychopharmaceuticals. With its unique global perspective, the book explores the way in which psychotropic medicines against insomnia, depression, or psychosis affect bodies and minds but also transform the moral and political meanings of suffering and trauma." —Didier Fassin, the James D. Wolfensohn Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton)

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