#
#
Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Health, Ethnicity and Diabetes: Racialised Constuctions of 'Risky' South Asian Bodies

By: Material type: TextPublisher number: Allied Informatics, Jaipur | 2019-20Publication details: London Palgrave Macmillan (Springer) c2016Description: 201ISBN:
  • 978-1-137-45702-8
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 610.89948 KEV
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
Books BSDU Knowledge Resource Center, Jaipur Reference 610.89948 KEV (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 017828

This book explores the often contentious relationship between health, concepts of race and ethnicity, and the impact on South Asian groups. Using medical sociological and anthropological perspectives, it excavates racialised constructions of diabetes ‘risk’ within discourses, and highlights the contrasting counter narratives in people’s accounts of their everyday lives.
By identifying a number of components to the discursive, racialised construction of ‘risky’ South Asian bodies, this book problematises taken for granted understandings of culture, lifestyle and genetic risk. The mobilisation of these mechanisms in health science and interventions result in a racialising gaze, directed at groups already experiencing historically embedded race-related issues. The book situates these constructions of risk against the emergent, fluid and dynamic counter narratives to risk constructions. The new found momentum in genetic science is also critiqued in its formulation of racial-genetic risk, especially in the case of diabetes in South Asian groups, and is identified as perpetuating a series of racializing processes.

Contents
1. Introduction

Part I Contextualising the 'Risky' South Asian Diabetic Body
2. Conceptualising Race, Ethnicity, and Health
3. Situating the South Asian Diabetic Risk
4. Constructing the Risk: Faulty Lifestyles, Faulty Genes
5. Method

Part II Resisting Constructions of Risk: The Counter-Narratives
6. Doing Everyday Diabetes
7. Using Complementary Health and Remedies
8. Diabetes, Biography and Community
9. 'Race-ing' Back to the Bio-genetic Future?
10. Conclusion
Bibliography6
Index

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.
Share