This book examines the modernization of the indigenous healing practice of Ayurveda in India. Combining contemporary ethnography with a study of key historical moments as glimpsed through early twentieth century texts, Jean M. Langford argues that Ayurveda evolved from an eclectic set of healing practices into a sign of Indian national culture. It was reimagined as a healing force not simply for bodily disorders but for colonial and postcolonial ills. Interweaving theory with narrative, Langford explores the strategies of contemporary practitioners who reconfigure Ayurvedic knowledge through institutions and technologies such as hospitals, anatomy labs, clinical trials, and sonograms. She shows how practitioners appropriate, transform, or circumvent the knowledge practices implicit in these institutions and technologies, destabilizing such categories as medicine, culture, science, symptom, and self, even as they deploy them in clinical practice. Ultimately, this study points to the future of Ayurveda in a transnational era as a remedy not only for the wounds of colonialism but also for an imagined cultural emptiness at the heart of global modernity.
Fluent Bodies: Ayurvedic Remedies for Postcolonial Imbalance
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Title
Fluent Bodies: Ayurvedic Remedies for Postcolonial Imbalance
Author
Edition
1st. ed.
Publisher
ISBN
0195670590
Length
x+311p., Figures; Notes; Glossary; Bibliography; Index.
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