Embodied Belonging: In/exclusion, Health Care, and Well-Being in a World in Motion.

Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry
Dominik Mattes, Claudia Lang

Abstract

In this introduction, we propose the notion of 'embodied belonging' as a fruitful analytical heuristic for scholars in medical and psychological anthropology. We envision this notion to help us gain a more nuanced understanding of the entanglements of the political, social, and affective dimensions of belonging and their effects on health, illness, and healing. A focus on embodied belonging, we argue, reveals how displacement, exclusion, and marginalization cause existential and health-related ruptures in people's lives and bodies, and how affected people, in the struggle for re/emplacement and re/integration, may regain health and sustain their well-being. Covering a variety of regional contexts (Germany/Vietnam, Norway, the UK, Japan), the contributions to this special issue examine how embodied non/belonging is experienced, re/imagined, negotiated, practiced, disrupted, contested, and achieved (or not) by their protagonists, who are excluded and marginalized in diverse ways. Each article highlights the intricate trajectories of how dynamics of non/belonging inscribe themselves in human bodies. They also reveal how belonging can be utilized and drawn on as a forceful means and resource of social resilience, if not (self-)ther...Continue Reading

References

Apr 16, 2005·Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health·Nancy Krieger
Jul 23, 2011·Medical Anthropology·James QuesadaPhilippe Bourgois
Oct 12, 2012·Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry·Taewoo KimJanis Faye Hutchinson
Apr 21, 2020·Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry·Anita von Poser, Edda Willamowski
Apr 21, 2020·Medical Anthropology Quarterly·Margaret Lock
May 27, 2020·Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry·Synnøve K N Bendixsen

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Citations

Jan 3, 2021·Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry·Sarah S Willen

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