Wind, Life, Health
Anthropological and Historical Perspectives
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Special Issue Book Series
1. Auflage Dezember 2007
192 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Kurzbeschreibung
Through a series of thought-provoking articles, Wind, Life, Health: Anthropological and Historical Perspectives examines the richness of human ideas surrounding wind in all its manifestations--breath, spirit, sentiment, life, and health.
Published as part of The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Special Issue Book Series, and through a series of thought-provoking articles, Wind, Life, Health: Anthropological and Historical Perspectives examines the richness of human ideas surrounding wind in all its manifestations - breath, spirit, sentiment, life, and health.
* Examines the richness of human ideas and practices surrounding wind, life, and health
* Features articles covering a wide range of themes including landscape, weather, body, perception, emplacement, climate, seasons, song, and music
* Conveys how different peoples have grappled with winds and spirits and how their experiences have shaped their world
* Explores a range of cultures: hunters and gatherers in the polar regions, inhabitants of the Malaysian rain forest, Andaman Islands, ancient India, China, Greece, Muslim East Africa, Victorian England, and mountain-dwelling Swiss
Introduction (Chris Low and Elisabeth Hsu).
1. Earth, sky, wind, and weather (Tim Ingold).
2. Wafting on the wind: smell and the cycle of spirit and matter (David Parkin).
3. Blowing 'cross the crest of Mount Galeng': winds of the voice, winds of the spirits (Marina Roseman).
4. Khoisan wind: hunting and healing (Chris Low).
5. Time to move: winds and the political economy of space in Andamanese culture (Vishvajit Pandya).
6. The bodily winds in ancient India revisited (Kenneth G. Zysk).
7. The experience of wind in early and medieval Chinese medicine (Elisabeth Hsu).
8. Pneuma between body and soul (Geoffrey Lloyd).
9. Gruff boreas, deadly calms: a medical perspective on winds and the Victorians (Vladimir Jankovic).
10. An ill wind: the Foehn in Leukerbad and beyond (Sarah Strauss).
Index.
Chris Low, a postdoctorate at Oxford, holds an ESRC Research Fellowship and is currently involved with research on the changing relationships between animals, Bushmen, and Bushman medicine.