Foley Ellen E
International Development, Community, and Environment Clark University, USA.
Med Anthropol Q. 2008 Sep;22(3):257-73. doi: 10.1111/j.1548-1387.2008.00025.x.
In this article, I trace the links among neoliberalism, regional ecological decline, and the dynamics of therapeutic processes in rural Senegal. By focusing on illness management in a small rural community, the article explores how economic reform is mediated by existing social structures, and how household social organization in turn influences therapeutic decision making. The illness episodes relayed here demonstrate how the acute economic and social crisis facing the Ganjool region becomes written on the bodies of young men, and how the fault lines of gender and generation shape illness experiences. These narratives also illuminate the tremendous discrepancy between the lived realities of sickness and death, and the idealized models of health participation and empowerment envisioned by the state. Rather than "neoliberal subjects" who behave as rational economic actors, men and women coping with illness are social beings embedded in fields of power characterized by highly stratified household social relations.
在本文中,我追溯了新自由主义、地区生态衰退与塞内加尔农村治疗过程动态之间的联系。通过聚焦于一个小型农村社区的疾病管理,本文探讨了经济改革如何通过现有的社会结构进行调节,以及家庭社会组织又如何反过来影响治疗决策。这里讲述的疾病事件展示了甘乔尔地区面临的严重经济和社会危机是如何体现在年轻男性身体上的,以及性别和代际的断层线如何塑造疾病体验。这些叙述还揭示了疾病与死亡的现实生活与国家所设想的理想化健康参与和赋权模式之间的巨大差异。与作为理性经济行为者的“新自由主义主体”不同,应对疾病的男性和女性是嵌入在以高度分层的家庭社会关系为特征的权力领域中的社会存在。