Bibliographic Information
Article Title
Rethinking Anthropological Studies of the Body: Manas and Bdham in Kerala.
Journal Title
American Anthropologist
Author(s)
Halliburton, Murphy
Month of Publication
December
Year of Publication
2002
Volume Number
104
Issue Number
4
Article Pages
1123-1134
Web Address (URL)
Additional Information
Available Through
JSTOR
Language
English
Notes
Abstract
Anthropological research that focuses on the body has been prolific in the last two decades. This trend has provided an important reorientation away from a tendency to focus on mental representations of experience and has allowed for a more holistic understanding of the human condition. However, this article argues that much research on the body has created a false dichotomy: Westerners are seen as living in a world of mentalistic bias and mind–body dualism while all others are understood as more grounded in their bodies. Ethnographic research conducted among people suffering psychopathology and possession in Kerala, India, challenges these assumptions about the embodied Other by showing that these patients experience a continuum of states of being that includes the body, mind, consciousness, and self/soul. This approach demonstrates how an examination of a local culturally and historically formed phenomenological orientation can provide a useful alternative to the tendency to discover embodied peoples.
Taxonomies
RPA Codes & Standards
CIfA Codes
- Principle 3: Responsibility for acquiring and recording reliable information of the past in archaeological research
- Principle 5: Recognition of aspirations of employees, colleagues and helpers in all matters of employment
Keywords & Terms
- Impact on Communities - Local, Descendant, etc.
- Integrity of Research Methodology and Field Procedures
- Respect for and Responsibility to Affected Groups