Desperately seeking ''normal'': the promise and perils of living with kidney transplantation [An article from: Social Science & Medicine]
Book Details
Author(s)M. Crowley-Matoka
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR7G8A
ISBN-13978B000RR7G87
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Social Science & Medicine, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
Organ transplantation offers a dramatic example of the promises for health held out by biomedicine-and thus, a productive vantage point from which to interrogate those promises. Drawing on ethnographic research on kidney transplantation in Guadalajara, Mexico, this article examines the version of ''health'' offered to patients through transplantation. The paper explores patients' transplant trajectories as they move from learning to desire a transplant to actually receiving one and living with it over the long term, all within particular structuring sociocultural and political economic conditions. The article analyzes how transplanted patients are forced to come to terms with the contingent states of ''health'' and ''normality'' wrought by transplantation as they carve out an existence in the persistently liminal spaces between the roles of ''sick'' and ''healthy,'' dependent patient and fully contributing family member.
Description:
Organ transplantation offers a dramatic example of the promises for health held out by biomedicine-and thus, a productive vantage point from which to interrogate those promises. Drawing on ethnographic research on kidney transplantation in Guadalajara, Mexico, this article examines the version of ''health'' offered to patients through transplantation. The paper explores patients' transplant trajectories as they move from learning to desire a transplant to actually receiving one and living with it over the long term, all within particular structuring sociocultural and political economic conditions. The article analyzes how transplanted patients are forced to come to terms with the contingent states of ''health'' and ''normality'' wrought by transplantation as they carve out an existence in the persistently liminal spaces between the roles of ''sick'' and ''healthy,'' dependent patient and fully contributing family member.
