NUS Home | Search: in Go
Back to NUS homepageNUS Press
 

Global Movements, Local Concerns: Medicine and Health in Southeast Asia

Laurence Monnais and Harold J. Cook (Editors)

The development of medicine in Southeast Asia over the past two centuries has not been a simple imposition of European scientific medicine, but a complex and negotiated process that drew on Southeast Asian health experts, local medical traditions, and changing national and popular expectations. The contributors to this volume show how the practices of health in Southeast Asia over the past two centuries were mediated by local medical traditions, colonial interests, governments and policies, international interventions, and by a wide range of health agents and intermediaries. Their findings call into question many of the claims based on medicalization and biopolitics that treat change as a process of rupture.

While governments, both colonial and national, instituted policies that affected large numbers of people, much health care remained rooted in a more interactive and locally-mediated experience, in which tradition, adaptation and hybridization is as important as innovation and conflict. "Semi-subaltern" Western-trained doctors and varied traditional healers, many of them women, were among the cultural brokers involved in the building of healthcare systems, and helped circulate mixed practices and ideas about medicine and health even as they found their place in new professional and social hierarchies in an era of globalization.

Laurence MONNAIS is an Associate Professor of History at the Universite de Montreal, and holder of the Canadian Research Chair in Health Care Pluralism.
Harold J. COOK is the John K. Nickoll Professor of History at Brown University.

publication year: 2012
350 pages
ISBN: 978-9971-69-639-9  Paperback  US$30.00  S$38.00

[A HOMSEA (History of Medicine in Southeast Asia) Series]

NUS Press: Home | Search | Site Map | Contact Us

© Copyright 2001-07 National University of Singapore. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Use | Privacy | Non-discrimination
Last modified on 17 April, 2012 by NUS Press