Women in pain : gender and morbidity in Mexico

Title
  1. Women in pain : gender and morbidity in Mexico / Kaja Finkler.
Published by
  1. Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, ©1994.
Author
  1. Finkler, Kaja.

Items in the library and off-site

Filter by

Displaying 1 item

StatusFormatAccessCall numberItem location
StatusFormatTextAccessUse in libraryCall numberRA564.85 .F56 1994Item locationOff-site

Details

Description
  1. xviii, 238 pages; 24 cm
Summary
  1. Why are Mexican women more likely to experience nonfatal diseases than their male counterparts? To unravel this mystery, Kaja Finkler explores the relationship between patterns of social interaction, cultural expectations, and gender ideologies. In Women in Pain, she examines the nature of sickness and its interaction with issues about gender and gender relations from both a historical and contemporary perspective. At the heart of Women in Pain are the life histories often women - most of them poor - who have suffered from chronic, nonfatal illnesses for extended periods. The women selected are very much individuals, but they are also representative of the larger sample from which they were chosen. Finkler shows how women's health issues are intertwined with social realities, cultural ideologies, and subjective evaluations. The women illuminate the subjective nature of sickness and how affliction is embedded in material and ideological webs. Finkler furnishes a fresh approach by weaving together the women's individual understandings about their lives, their distresses, their social circumstances, and their cultural beliefs. The resulting tapestry brings into bold relief aspects of their existence (including relationships with their mates) that pose dangers to their health. To give the reader a sense of how the women experience their pain, Finkler attends to the women's symptomatologies, to the bio-medical diagnoses they receive, to their health seeking trajectories, to the history of their symptoms, and to their biographies within the context of their anguish. She uses the concept of "life's lesions," defined roughly as the physical damage caused by cultural and social factors, to interpret the rich data gathered from her extensive fieldwork. While the focus is on the lives of Mexican women, the book speaks to women's existence in contemporary society in general, and to the theoretical concerns regarding gender and health. All those interested in gender issues, women's lives, and women's health issues in developing nations will find the book fascinating and rewarding reading.
Subject
  1. Women > Health and hygiene > Mexico
  2. Women > Health and hygiene > Social aspects > Mexico
  3. Women > Health and hygiene > Mexico > Case studies
  4. Women > Health and hygiene > Social aspects > Mexico > Case studies
  5. Sex role > Mexico
  6. Women > Health and hygiene
  7. Sex factors in disease
  8. Women's Health
  9. Sex Factors
  10. Socioeconomic Factors
  11. Sex factors in disease
  12. Sex role
  13. Women > Health and hygiene
  14. Women > Health and hygiene > Social aspects
  15. Gesundheitsverhalten
  16. Gesundheit
  17. Psychosoziale Situation
  18. Frau
  19. Vrouwen
  20. Gezondheid
  21. Hygiëne
  22. Gender roles
  23. Femmes > Santé et hygiène > Cas, Études de. > Mexique
  24. Rôle selon le sexe > Mexique
  25. Mexico
  26. Mexiko
Genre/Form
  1. Case studies
Contents
  1. pt. I. The Problem -- 1. Introduction. 2. The Nature of Sickness. 3. The Nature of Gender. 4. Gender and the Nature of Sickness -- pt. II. The Context. 5. Gender, Culture, and Society in Mexico. 6. An Aggregate Profile of a Sick Population of Women -- pt. III. Women's Lives and Women's Pains. 7. Margarita: A Women in Search of Individuation. 8. Alicia: A Mother and a Mistress. 9. Julia: A Drunken Husband. 10. Rebecca: A Woman on the Verge of Disintegration. 11. Juana: In Search of Dignity Amid a Garbage Dump. 12. Carlota: From Proletarian to Housewife. 13. Josefina: "All My Life I Worked Very Hard" 14. Susana: A Woman Who Ventured into the Public Domain. 15. Norma: "I Have Found God" 16. Maria: Out of the Frying Pan and into the Fire -- 17. Conclusion.
Owning institution
  1. Princeton University Library
Bibliography (note)
  1. Includes bibliographical references (p. [211]-229) and index.