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Those Who Touch
Tuareg Medicine Women in Anthropolotical Perspective
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Main description:

A twenty-five-year veteran of field research in Niger and Mali, anthropologist Susan J. Rasmussen examines the female-dominated practice of herbalism in the seminomadic Muslim communities of Tuareg. Medicine women, known as tinesmegelen, diagnose by touch and treat their patients-mostly women and children-with leaves, bark, and roots from trees associated with ancestral spirits. In addition to healing, they relate oral traditions, offer marital counseling, protect patients against potential domestic violence, and practice divination.

By earning the trust of nearly twenty medicine women over the course of her fieldwork, Rasmussen is able to provide an in-depth profile of these healers and their beliefs. The women come from diverse backgrounds, many of noble origins. Whereas they must be mothers, most do not practice their profession fully until their post-childbearing years. Rasmussen traces the mythical-historical origins of female herbalism and the initiation process for entering the profession. Significantly, she investigates the powerful relationships between medicine women and various authorities: Islamic leaders, state officials, and the medical staff of nongovernment clinics.

Rasmussen draws the reader into this fascinating world of medicine women through interviews, guided conversations, life histories, illustrative case studies, and, most importantly, the words of the healers and their patients. As a participant-observer, she shares her own experiences with descriptions of the treatments she herself received. Then, moving from a focused analysis to a broader contextual frame, she addresses central questions in anthropology about gender, knowledge, and the interface between religion and medicine.


Contents:

Table of ContentsDeconstructing and Recasting Female Healing: Preliminary RemarksPART ONE: Departures-Herbal Medicine and Local and Authoritative Systems of Thought1. The Vexing Problem of Difference and Classifications in Anthropology and the Local Ethnographic Setting2. Herbalism, Medicine, and Curing-Medicine Women's Concepts of Wellness, Illness, and HealingPART TWO: Touch and Word-Learning and Transmitting Medicine3. Touch, Body, and Senses4. Word and Deed-Oral Traditions and the Mythico-History of Herbal Medicine5. Medicine Women, Gender, and Physical and Social Reproduction over the Life Course6. Natural Imagery (Arboreal Tropes) in Herbalism-Plant Uses in Nature and CulturePART THREE: Medicine Women and Wider Systems of Power7. Medicine Women, Sacred Places, and Al Baraka Ritual Benediction8. Medicine Women and Islam-Relations with Marabouts9. Medicine Women and Other "Shamans"-Herbalism, the Spirits of the Wild, Divination, and Power10. Changes in the Wind-Medicine Women's Relations with Established BiomedicineConclusions-Herbal Healing, Modes of Thought, and GenderNotesWorks CitedIndex


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9780875806105
Publisher: Northern Illinois University Press
Publication date: April, 2006
Pages: 240
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Complementary Medicine

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