The afterlife of “doing medicine”: Birth planning, chronic illness, and regeneration among the Lisu on the China–Myanmar border

IF 2 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Medical Anthropology Quarterly Pub Date : 2023-09-04 DOI:10.1111/maq.12807
Ting Hui Lau
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Abstract

Between the late 1970s and 1990s, many indigenous Lisu people in the Nu River Valley, an Eastern Himalayan region of China bordering Myanmar and Tibet, underwent what they referred to as “doing medicine”—abortions, vasectomies, and tubal ligations—as part of China's Birth Planning Policy. Lisu, who endured these procedures, struggle with strength loss, nervousness, and pain. Government discourses diminish the Lisu experience, arguing that the policy was lenient toward them. Lisu themselves are reticent to share their experiences but have devised new practices to care for those affected. Drawing on long-term ethnographic fieldwork, I argue that these chronic illnesses and accompanying care practices constitute everyday forms of remembering through which Lisu give shape to their experiences of cultural loss under Chinese colonization while generating new social relationships. This analysis sheds light on Indigenous experiences of birth planning in China with broader implications for understanding the bureaucratic violence of medicine.

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“治病”的来生:中缅边境傈僳族的生育计划、慢性病和再生。
在20世纪70年代末到90年代之间,作为中国计划生育政策的一部分,中国喜马拉雅东部地区怒江流域的许多土著傈僳族人接受了他们所谓的“做药”——堕胎、输精管切除术和输卵管结扎。Lisu忍受着这些手术,在力量丧失、紧张和疼痛中挣扎。政府的言论贬低了傈僳族的经历,认为政策对他们很宽容。傈僳族人不愿分享他们的经历,但他们设计了新的做法来照顾那些受影响的人。根据长期的民族志田野调查,我认为这些慢性疾病和伴随的护理实践构成了日常记忆的形式,通过这些形式,傈僳族在中国殖民统治下塑造了他们的文化损失经历,同时产生了新的社会关系。这一分析揭示了中国计划生育的本土经验,对理解医学的官僚暴力具有更广泛的意义。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.50%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: Medical Anthropology Quarterly: International Journal for the Analysis of Health publishes research and theory in the field of medical anthropology. This broad field views all inquiries into health and disease in human individuals and populations from the holistic and cross-cultural perspective distinctive of anthropology as a discipline -- that is, with an awareness of species" biological, cultural, linguistic, and historical uniformity and variation. It encompasses studies of ethnomedicine, epidemiology, maternal and child health, population, nutrition, human development in relation to health and disease, health-care providers and services, public health, health policy, and the language and speech of health and health care.
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