Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781469670973 Academic Inspection Copy

Culture in the Clinic

Miami & the Making of Modern Medicine
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
After the 1959 Cuban Revolution, hundreds of thousands of Cuban refugees came to Miami. With this influx, the city's health-care system was overwhelmed not just by the number of patients but also by the differences in culture. Mainstream medicine was often inaccessible or inadequate to Miami's growing community of Latin American and Caribbean immigrants. Instead, many sought care from alternative, often unlicensed health practitioners. During the 1960s, a recently arrived Cuban feeling ill might have visited a local clinica, a quasi-legal storefront doctor's office, or a santero, a priest in the Afro-Cuban religion of Lukumi or Santeria. This exceptionally diverse medical scene would catch the attention of anthropologists who made Miami's multiethnic population into a laboratory for cross-cultural care. By the 1990s, the medical establishment in Miami had matured into a complex and culturally informed health-delivery system, generating models of care that traveled far beyond the city. Some clinicas had transformed into lucrative HMOs, Santeria became legally protected by the courts, and medical anthropology played a significant role in the rise of global health. Catherine Mas shows how immigrants reshaped American medicine while the clinic became a crucial site for navigating questions of wellness, citizenship, and culture.
Catherine Mas is assistant professor of history at Florida International University.
"Culture in the Clinic superbly explores the critical ways medical anthropology impacted medicine."--Journal of American History "An extremely engaging read and should appeal to scholars in medical humanities, history of medicine, medical anthropology, medical geography, and ethnic studies. It is a welcome contribution and will hopefully inspire other researchers to explore the rich cultural history and healing traditions of Miami and other diasporic enclaves in the United States."--H-Sci-Med-Tech "Mas captures the vibrant movements that transformed twentieth-century Miami into a global city. Using healthcare in Miami as the specific object of analysis, Mas shows how Cold War global imaginaries intersected with local realities of place in ways that continue to influence contemporary care in the USA."--Social History of Medicine
Google Preview content