Diagnosing Folklore: Perspectives on Disability, Health, and Trauma

Author:   Trevor J. Blank ,  Andrea Kitta
Publisher:   University Press of Mississippi
ISBN:  

9781496814753


Pages:   250
Publication Date:   30 September 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Diagnosing Folklore: Perspectives on Disability, Health, and Trauma


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Overview

Contributions by Sheila Bock, London Brickley, Olivia Caldeira, Diane E. Goldstein, Darcy Holtgrave, Kate Parker Horigan, Michael Owen Jones, Elaine J. Lawless, Amy Shuman, Annie Tucker, and Kristiana Willsey Diagnosing Folklore provides an inclusive forum for an expansive conversation on the sensitive, raw, and powerful processes that shape and imbue meaning in the lives of individuals and communities beleaguered by medical stigmatization, conflicting public perceptions, and contextual constraints. This volume aims to showcase current ideas and debates, as well as promote the larger study of disability, health, and trauma within folkloristics, helping bridge the gaps between the folklore discipline and disability studies. This book consists of three sections, each dedicated to key issues in disability, health, and trauma. It explores the confluence of disability, ethnography, and the stigmatized vernacular through communicative competence, esoteric and exoteric groups in the Special Olympics, and the role of family in stigmatized communities. Then, it considers knowledge, belief, and treatment in regional and ethnic communities with case studies from the Latino/a community in Los Angeles, Javanese Indonesia, and Middle America. Lastly, the volume looks to the performance of mental illness, stigma, and trauma through contemporary legends about mental illness, vlogs on bipolar disorder, medical fetishism, and veterans’ stories.

Full Product Details

Author:   Trevor J. Blank ,  Andrea Kitta
Publisher:   University Press of Mississippi
Imprint:   University Press of Mississippi
Weight:   0.355kg
ISBN:  

9781496814753


ISBN 10:   1496814754
Pages:   250
Publication Date:   30 September 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

This timely volume represents a worthy new step in the application of folklore to the study of health, illness, and care, and to related issues of communication, self-definition, and community practice. Case narratives and methodological discussions frame this book's particular focus on dis/ability, mental health and illness, socially stigmatized conditions, and social constructions of the 'normal.' It raises (but does not pretend to answer) tough questions about power, privilege, lived experience, the nature and location of 'expertise,' conceptual validity of the opinions and approaches of identity-group 'outsiders,' the nature of 'normality' and acceptability, and many more. It will be a valuable reference work not only within its own discipline, but among health care and health policy professionals who recognize the critical importance of trying to empathize with the experiences and perspectives of their intended beneficiaries. Let us hope their number is legion! - Bonnie B. O'Connor, folklorist and professor emerita of pediatrics at the Warren Alpert School of Medicine of Brown University This is the book that profoundly shows how folklore touches lives at their core. It makes us realize how folklore opens for view, indeed defines, disability, health, and trauma in our consciousness. With provocative case studies, authors probe fundamental matters of normality and wellness in mind and body. Using folklore to guide a healthy checkup of basic notions of life, the book is a welcome dose of reality and culture to bridge science and the humanities and to invite our own self-examination. - Simon J. Bronner, Distinguished Professor of Folklore at the Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg, and author of Explaining Traditions: Folk Behavior in Modern Culture and Campus Traditions: Folklore from the Old-Time College to the Modern Mega-University


Author Information

Trevor J. Blank, Malone, New York, is assistant professor of communication at the State University of New York at Potsdam. He is the author of The Last Laugh: Folk Humor, Celebrity Culture, and Mass-Mediated Disasters in the Digital Age and coauthor of Maryland Legends: Folklore from the Old Line State.|Andrea Kitta, Greenville, North Carolina, is associate professor at East Carolina University. She is the author of Vaccinations and Public Concern in History: Legend, Rumor, and Risk Perception.

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