Description

Book Synopsis
An ethnography of post-Soviet Cubas health-care sector which reveals Cuba to be a pragmatic and contradictory state.

Trade Review
"Revolutionary Medicine is fabulous. In this intelligent, insightful, and nuanced book, P. Sean Brotherton takes health care as a window through which to view and understand the 'new Cuba,' which, as he notes, incorporates elements of the prerevolutionary period, the Soviet era, and the post-Soviet era. Both substantively and analytically, this is a book of very high quality."—Susan Eckstein, author of Back from the Future: Cuba under Castro
Revolutionary Medicine is a an engaging and theoretically curious ethnography which masterfully connects global macroeconomic changes to the micropolitics of health in contemporary Cuba, and will speak to a wide range of disciplines and scholars within medical anthropology, public health, political sciences and Latin American studies.” -- Eva Vernooij * Medische Antropologie *
Revolutionary Medicine…represents an important contribution to an emergent anthropological literature on the Cuban State in the post-1990 era…It will be of interest to a broad range of readers, including undergraduates, graduate students and specialists in global health, medical anthropology, political theory and Latin American studies.” -- Jennifer Lambe * Global Public Health *
“This is a must-read book for the important questions that it asks, the lens through which Brotherton examines the Cuban experience of the health care system, and the carefully collected and analyzed data. . . . It is theoretically provocative, successfully problematizing conventional models of agency in health behavior and especially in the context of the Cuban health care system.” -- Kathleen Musante Dewalt * American Ethnologist *
“In this excellent analysis of the impact of change since 1989, Brotherton provides a rich ethnographic picture of what this has meant in practice for both medical professionals and citizens seeking treatment…. This is a thought-provoking and sensitive study that will be of major interest both to public health professionals as well as scholars.” -- Gavin O'Toole * Latin American Review of Books *
“The book does a brilliant job of demonstrating the productive relationships between individual bodily practices and macro-level socioeconomic change. Brotherton makes valuable contributions to analytic understandings of medically mediated citizenship, subjectivity, and the limits of individual agency and state authority in a context of ongoing economic crisis. Revolutionary Medicine would be an excellent stand-alone text to read in graduate or undergraduate courses in Latin American studies, medical anthropology, global health, or the medical humanities.” -- Amy Cooper * Somatosphere *
“Others have studied the Cuban health system, but no one has delved into the political dynamics of Cuba’s universal health provision in the way that Brotherton has…. [T]his study… is an enormous contribution to our understandings of a tumultuous period of Cuban life and demonstrates the power of ethnographic analysis to those outside anthropology who belatedly discover Brotherton’s excellent analysis.” -- Thomas F. Carter * Anthropological Quarterly *
“Brotherton’s book is a comprehensive, engaging, and original account of the health landscape in Cuba from the outset of the ‘Special Period’ of the 1990s...This intriguing book, over a decade in the making, is worthy of the time invested in it--it makes a valuable contribution to the literature on health in Cuba.” -- Elizabeth Kath * Bulletin of the History of Medicine *
“Brotherton’s work has an important place within Cuban studies literature for two reasons. First, his attention to detail is phenomenal . . . The second important reason is that voices of dissent against the Cuban system, or against any system, are imperative for furthering our understanding of how policies and programs can shape the lived experiences of individuals.” -- Robert Huish * Anthropos *
“The book is based on more than 10 years of intermittent fieldwork and hundreds of interviews with medical professionals and patients. This wealth of ethnographic material is channeled into a fluent analysis that makes it an exceptional read…. The monograph possesses a literary quality (i.e. it is highly descriptive and showcases wonderfully compelling stories), provides plenty of complementary visual material, and it reads well despite the theoretical depth.” -- Karina Vasilevska * Anthropological Notebooks *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations ix
List of Tables xi
Prologue xiii
Preface. An Ethnography of Contradictions xv
Acknowledgments xxv
Introduction. Bodies in States of Crisis 1
Part I. Biopolitics in the Special Period 13
1. The Biopolitics of Health 15
2. Expanding Therapeutic Itineraries 35
Part II. Socialist Governmentality, Public Health, and Risk 55
3. Medicalized Subjectivities 57
4. Curing the Social Ills of Society 84
5. Preventive Strategies and Productive Bodies 111
Part III. We Have to Think Like Capitalists but Continue Being Socialists 145
6. Turismo y Salud, S.A.: The Rise of Socialist Entrepreneurs 147
7. My Doctor Keeps the Lights On 169
Conclusion. Bodies Entangled in History 182
Coda 191
Notes 193
Bibliography 219
Index 245

Revolutionary Medicine

    Product form

    £25.19

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £27.99 – you save £2.80 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 7 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by P. Sean Brotherton

    1 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Revolutionary Medicine by P. Sean Brotherton

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 21/03/2012
      ISBN13: 9780822352051, 978-0822352051
      ISBN10: 0822352052

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An ethnography of post-Soviet Cubas health-care sector which reveals Cuba to be a pragmatic and contradictory state.

      Trade Review
      "Revolutionary Medicine is fabulous. In this intelligent, insightful, and nuanced book, P. Sean Brotherton takes health care as a window through which to view and understand the 'new Cuba,' which, as he notes, incorporates elements of the prerevolutionary period, the Soviet era, and the post-Soviet era. Both substantively and analytically, this is a book of very high quality."—Susan Eckstein, author of Back from the Future: Cuba under Castro
      Revolutionary Medicine is a an engaging and theoretically curious ethnography which masterfully connects global macroeconomic changes to the micropolitics of health in contemporary Cuba, and will speak to a wide range of disciplines and scholars within medical anthropology, public health, political sciences and Latin American studies.” -- Eva Vernooij * Medische Antropologie *
      Revolutionary Medicine…represents an important contribution to an emergent anthropological literature on the Cuban State in the post-1990 era…It will be of interest to a broad range of readers, including undergraduates, graduate students and specialists in global health, medical anthropology, political theory and Latin American studies.” -- Jennifer Lambe * Global Public Health *
      “This is a must-read book for the important questions that it asks, the lens through which Brotherton examines the Cuban experience of the health care system, and the carefully collected and analyzed data. . . . It is theoretically provocative, successfully problematizing conventional models of agency in health behavior and especially in the context of the Cuban health care system.” -- Kathleen Musante Dewalt * American Ethnologist *
      “In this excellent analysis of the impact of change since 1989, Brotherton provides a rich ethnographic picture of what this has meant in practice for both medical professionals and citizens seeking treatment…. This is a thought-provoking and sensitive study that will be of major interest both to public health professionals as well as scholars.” -- Gavin O'Toole * Latin American Review of Books *
      “The book does a brilliant job of demonstrating the productive relationships between individual bodily practices and macro-level socioeconomic change. Brotherton makes valuable contributions to analytic understandings of medically mediated citizenship, subjectivity, and the limits of individual agency and state authority in a context of ongoing economic crisis. Revolutionary Medicine would be an excellent stand-alone text to read in graduate or undergraduate courses in Latin American studies, medical anthropology, global health, or the medical humanities.” -- Amy Cooper * Somatosphere *
      “Others have studied the Cuban health system, but no one has delved into the political dynamics of Cuba’s universal health provision in the way that Brotherton has…. [T]his study… is an enormous contribution to our understandings of a tumultuous period of Cuban life and demonstrates the power of ethnographic analysis to those outside anthropology who belatedly discover Brotherton’s excellent analysis.” -- Thomas F. Carter * Anthropological Quarterly *
      “Brotherton’s book is a comprehensive, engaging, and original account of the health landscape in Cuba from the outset of the ‘Special Period’ of the 1990s...This intriguing book, over a decade in the making, is worthy of the time invested in it--it makes a valuable contribution to the literature on health in Cuba.” -- Elizabeth Kath * Bulletin of the History of Medicine *
      “Brotherton’s work has an important place within Cuban studies literature for two reasons. First, his attention to detail is phenomenal . . . The second important reason is that voices of dissent against the Cuban system, or against any system, are imperative for furthering our understanding of how policies and programs can shape the lived experiences of individuals.” -- Robert Huish * Anthropos *
      “The book is based on more than 10 years of intermittent fieldwork and hundreds of interviews with medical professionals and patients. This wealth of ethnographic material is channeled into a fluent analysis that makes it an exceptional read…. The monograph possesses a literary quality (i.e. it is highly descriptive and showcases wonderfully compelling stories), provides plenty of complementary visual material, and it reads well despite the theoretical depth.” -- Karina Vasilevska * Anthropological Notebooks *

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations ix
      List of Tables xi
      Prologue xiii
      Preface. An Ethnography of Contradictions xv
      Acknowledgments xxv
      Introduction. Bodies in States of Crisis 1
      Part I. Biopolitics in the Special Period 13
      1. The Biopolitics of Health 15
      2. Expanding Therapeutic Itineraries 35
      Part II. Socialist Governmentality, Public Health, and Risk 55
      3. Medicalized Subjectivities 57
      4. Curing the Social Ills of Society 84
      5. Preventive Strategies and Productive Bodies 111
      Part III. We Have to Think Like Capitalists but Continue Being Socialists 145
      6. Turismo y Salud, S.A.: The Rise of Socialist Entrepreneurs 147
      7. My Doctor Keeps the Lights On 169
      Conclusion. Bodies Entangled in History 182
      Coda 191
      Notes 193
      Bibliography 219
      Index 245

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account