ANTH 5250
Instructor: Dr. Bilinda Straight
Moore Hall 1001; Tel: 387-0409
email: Bilinda DOT straight AT
wmich.edu
Web Page: http://homepages.wmich.edu/~bstraigh
Spirits and Medicine
How is healing linked to
belief? What do we or should we mean by belief, experience, and consciousness?
How do the beliefs and cultural understandings of healing professionals
mutually shape the understandings and experiences of their clients? What is the
relationship between body and mind cross-culturally, and how does this relate
to healing? In this course, we will seek answers to these and related
questions. First, we will consider the issue of perception itself—how
individuals come to their understandings of the world. Related to this, we will
also examine some anthropological ideas about what human consciousness and
experience are—an issue that will be central for us as we seek to
understand different forms of illness and healing. Then we will look at healing
practices in the United States and cross-culturally as they relate to belief,
experience, and consciousness, including: western medicine and alternatives,
spirit possession and trance, and methods of divination.
Required
Course Readings
Csordas, Thomas. 1990. The Sacred Self: A Cultural Phenomenology of
Charismatic Healing. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Damasio, Antonio. 1999. The Feeling of What Happens: Body and
Emotion in the Making of Consciousness. New York, NY: Harcourt Brace.
Desjarlais, Robert. 1993. Body and Emotion: The Aesthetics of Illness and
Healing in the Nepal Himalayas. Philadelphia, PA: University of
Pennsylvania Press.
Lock, Margaret. 2002. Twice
Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death. Berkeley, CA:
University of California Press.
Shelley,
Mary. 1996. Frankenstein. Norton
Critical Edition, edited by J. Paul Hunter.
Grading (See Grading Key for
complete instructions)
Attendance/Participation 15% E-Learning
Discussions 30%
Preliminary
Bibliography 20% Final
Essay 35%
Attendance/Participation
(15% of grade): In a class of this kind and size, your presence
and participation are essential to the quality of the experience for others as
well as yourself. Your attendance grade will be based on the number of days you
are absent, calculated as points missed on a one-hundred
percent scale.
e-learning Discussions (30% of grade). Each
week, you will write approximately 300 words summarizing the week�s readings,
which you will post to the elearning Discussion Board
no later than 8 AM Monday morning (you can post any time up until then,
including the weekend, the middle of the night, etc.). Then, between Monday at
8AM and Tuesday at 8AM, you will post a comment that engages with at least one
fellow student�s summaries. Your summaries should summarize main points and
demonstrate you have read all readings. It is encouraged, but not required, to
raise a question for consideration in class.
Preliminary
Bibliography (20% of grade): This will be an essay and
annotated bibliography of sources you are using in your paper. Begin with an
introduction that includes the thesis statement or argument you will be
pursuing in your paper. Discuss the kinds of material (essays, books, popular media, local fieldwork you will use to pursue your
argument. Next, provide a one-paragraph summary for each of 4 or 5 sources, and a sentence or two of how they should be
useful to your paper. Include full bibliographic information for each of
these sources, and do not include course
readings for annotated bib! Course readings should be used for your paper where appropriate but do not count
towards this assignment. You must use at least one book. Web sources are
not allowed (except for downloaded articles from scholarly journals available
online). If your topic is on something on the internet
itself (following chat rooms on a particular topic, or analysis of online
media) this is your data, not your bib sources.
Final
Essay (35% of grade): This will be a 10-12 page
research essay for undergraduates, 15 pages for graduate students. (I will read
up to 20 pages.) It can be on a topic of your choice, but must be relevant to
the course readings. If you have difficulty in coming up with a topic, please
feel free to see me. Include a bibliography for anything you cite. When you
cite, quote, or paraphrase in text, put an in-text citation in parentheses
(author�s last name, date, page number if a direct quote). It looks like this: (Straight 1997) for
citation or paraphrase, (Straight 1997: 37) for direct quote. You should always
cite when you are drawing upon someone�s research or ideas. If you conduct any
of your own interviews, you should create pseudonyms for your respondents and
cite quotations from those interviews like this (Miller interview, 2002).
Late
Work: NO LATE WORK WILL BE ACCEPTED—(any exceptions made
for documented reasons will be docked one letter grade).
Academic
Integrity: You are responsible for making yourself aware of and
understanding the policies and procedures in the Undergraduate Catalog (pp.
268-269)/Graduate Catalog (pp. 26-27) that pertain to academic integrity. These
policies include cheating, fabrication, falsification and forgery, multiple
submission, plagiarism, complicity and computer misuse. If there is reason to
believe you have been involved in academic dishonesty, you will be referred to
the Office of Student Conduct. You will be given the opportunity to review the
charge(s). If you believe you are not responsible, you will have the
opportunity for a hearing. You should consult with me if you are uncertain
about an issue of academic honesty prior to the submission of an assignment or
test.
Bilinda Straight�s
Grading Key
All quantitative semester grades are multiplied by the
percentage of the spread they represent. Thus, if you have a 90 on
attendance/participation, multiplied by 20% of the spread, gives you 18. All
grades thus calculated are added together to equal the total percentage out of
one hundred. Your semester grade is then calculated as per the key below. Using
this key and instructions, you can keep track of your own grade as the semester
progresses, but always feel free to ask me for assistance in calculating it.
Grade Scale for Final Grades
97-100 A+
94-96 A
87-93 BA
84-86 B
77-83 CB
74-76 C
67-73 DC
60-66 D
below 60 E
Course schedule
As
Buddha said, change is inherent in the universe. Like everything, this schedule
is subject to change. Indeed, the only contract for readings I will make here
is that you will indeed read what follows. I reserve the right to add readings
as we go.
PART ONE: Consciousness, Self, and Belief. Can western theories of self, consciousness, and social
memory be reconciled with anthropological
understandings of intersubjectivity, historical
consciousness, and social memory? We will start addressing this question here,
and will still be considering it when we leave this course.
Module One: 1/8 Overview of course
(brief); Movie: Memento; discussion
Module Two: 1/15
"Core Consciousness" And now, for something completely different.
Reading: Feeling of What Happens (Damasio) Appendix (pp. 312-335) and Parts I and II (pp.
3-130). It may be unfamiliar reading, but do your best.
Module Three: 1/22 Habitus and Social Memory
in Anthropology
Reading: Chaper 2 (Structures and Habitus,
pp. 72-95) in Pierre Bourdieu's Outline
of a Theory of Practice (1977) and Chapter 4 (Habitus and Emotion, pp.
99-128) in Deborah Reed-Danahay's Locating Bourdieu (2005). [Both in elearning]
Module Four: 1/29 Consciousness, Self, and
Emotion Explained?
Reading: Feeling of What Happens (Damasio) Parts III and IV (pp. 131-311).
PART TWO: Death, Self, Personhood, and Soul
Module Five 2/5 Death and Beyond, A
Beginning
Readings: Shelley's Frankenstein (in its entirety); Butler's essay in Frankenstein (pp. 302-313); and Twice Dead (Lock) Preamble-Ch. 2 (pp. 1-77).
[Recommended in
Frankenstein: Moers' Female Gothic (pp. 214-224; Lipking's essay reading Frankenstein through Rousseau (pp. 313-330).]
Module Six: 2/12 Death, Self, and
Consciousness in the US and Japan
Reading: Twice Dead (Lock) Chapters 3-end (pp.
78-377).
Module Seven: 2/19 Death,
Grief, and Resurrection in Northern Kenya
Reading: Introductory Excerpt and Chapters 6-7 plus Glossary (pp.
26-36; 115-152; 247-251) of Bilinda Straight's Miracles and Extraordinary Experience in Northern Kenya [in Waldo
e-reserves]
PART THREE: Touch, Pain, Medicine, and Personhood
Module Eight: 2/26 Bodies, Souls, Emotion,
and Pain
Reading: Body and Emotion (Desjarlais)
Part I (pp. 3-156).
Module Nine: 3/12 Touch (Part 1),
Body/Mind, Memory, and Pain (Part 2)
Reading: Chapter 7 (Touch, pp.
97-111) in Nina Jablonski's (2006) Skin: A Natural History; Jenny Slatman 'Transparent Bodies: Revealing the Myth of
Interiority' (pp. 107-122 in Renee van de Vall and Robert Zwijnenberg's The Body Within: Art, Medicine and Visualization, 2009); Chapter 1
(The Neurobiology of Trauma and Memory in Children, pp. 11-49) in Mark L. Howe,
Gail S. Goodman, and Dante Cicchetti's (2008) Stress, Trauma, and Children's Memory
Development; and Chapter 4 (The Whiplash Syndrome II: A Model of the Brain
in Trauma, pp, 37-60 in Robert C. Scaer's (2007) The Body Bears the Burden: Trauma, Dissociation, and Disease.
Module Ten: 3/19
Reading: Excerpt from Part III
('Pain') in Constance Classen's (2005) The Book of
Touch (pp. 109-119); Excerpt from Melanie Thersen's (2010) The Pain Chronicles (pp. 3-13;
77-80; 193-205; and 279-294); Jean Jackson's (2005) 'Stigma, Liminality, and Chronic Pain: Mind-Body Borderlands', American Ethnologist 32(3): 332-353; and
Susanna Trnka's (2007) 'Languages of Labor:
Negotiating the 'Real' and the Relational in Indo-Fijian Women's Expressions of
Physical Pain', Medical Anthropology
Quarterly 21(4): 388-408.
PART FOUR: Belief, Consciousness, and Healing
Cross-Culturally
Module Eleven: 3/26 Healing Bodies and
Souls
Reading: Bodies and Emotion (Desjarlais) Part II (pp. 159-253).
Module Twelve: 4/2 Healing Souls and
Bodies in the US
Reading: The Sacred Self (Csordas):
Chapters 1-5 (pp. 1-140).
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHIC ESSAY DUE IN CLASS
11/29
Module Thirteen: 4/9 The Borders of
Self, Consciousness, and Experience
Reading: The Sacred Self (Csordas):
Chapters 6-10 (pp. 141-282).
Module Fourteen 4/16 Synthesis,
Discussion of Papers
Reading:
TBA
FINAL EXAM: Turn in hard copies of papers to
my mailbox by TUESDAY, 7 pm of exam
week AND send papers as email attachment (Word file) with subject heading
'PAPER'. Electronic versions are for departmental curriculum assessment. No papers will be graded without hard
copies.