“我在这儿感觉不舒服。但它已成为我的家:在治疗圣地的遗弃和关怀。

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology & Medicine Pub Date : 2023-09-01 Epub Date: 2023-05-08 DOI:10.1080/13648470.2023.2171237
Shubha Ranganathan
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在考虑护理时,许多研究都集中在亲属关系,家庭相关护理以及正式(医疗)或非正式护理提供者上。然而,在亲属关怀虽然是一种理想的社会规范,但却不存在的情况下,我们如何理解护理责任,人们转向其他社区资源或实践?本文借鉴了在印度西部的一个苏菲宗教圣地进行的人种学研究,该圣地以向包括精神疾病患者在内的遇险人士提供援助而闻名。对由于与亲属关系紧张而离开家园的朝圣者进行了采访。对她们中的许多人来说,靖国神社是一个避难所,尽管并不完全安全,但它允许女性独自生活。虽然关于精神卫生机构和国家反应的学术研究都深入研究了长期机构或养老院中被遗弃或“被抛弃的女人”,但本文认为,“遗弃”不是一个直截了当的条件,而是一种以不同方式起作用的动态话语。对于失去亲属关系的女性来说,被亲属抛弃的故事成为长期(有时是永久)居住在宗教圣地的理由,这些圣地能够吸收这些“被遗弃”的朝圣者,他们无处可去,即使是半心半意。重要的是,这些因神社而成为可能的替代生活形式反映了妇女的能力性,使妇女即使属于一个社区也能独自生活。在家庭状况不稳定的妇女的社会保障选择有限的情况下,这些照料安排变得非常重要,即使它们是非正式和矛盾的照料形式。关键词:亲属关系;放弃;机构;护理;宗教愈合。
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'I do not feel well here as such. But it has become my home': abandonment and care in healing shrines.
Abstract In thinking about care, much research has focused on kin relations, family-related care, and formal (medical) or informal care providers. Yet, how do we understand care responsibilities in contexts where kin care is absent despite being a desired social norm, and people turn to other community sources or practices? This paper draws on ethnographic research in a Sufi religious shrine in western India well-known for providing succor to those in distress, including those with mental illness. Interviews were conducted with pilgrims who had left homes due to strained relationships with kin members. For many of them, the shrine emerged as a sanctuary, even while not entirely a safe one, allowing women to live alone. While both academic research on mental health institutions and state responses have delved into the abandoned or ‘dumped woman’ in long-stay institutions or care homes, this paper argues that ‘abandonment’ is not a straightforward condition, but rather a dynamic discourse that works in different ways. For women bereft of kinship ties, narratives of being abandoned by kin became ways of justifying long (and sometimes permanent) residence in religious shrines, which were able to absorb such ‘abandoned’ pilgrims who had nowhere else to go, even if half-heartedly so. Importantly, these alternative forms of living made possible by shrines reflect women’s agency, enabling women to live alone even while belonging to a community. In a context with limited social security options for women in precarious family situations, these care arrangements become significant, even if they are informal and ambivalent forms of care. Keywords: kinship; abandonment; agency; care; religious healing
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