Undoing gender? The case of complementary and alternative medicine
Autor: | Joslyn Brenton, Sinikka Elliott |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Complementary Therapies Male medicine.medical_specialty Health (social science) Distancing Reproduction (economics) media_common.quotation_subject Abusive relationship Alternative medicine Rationality Undoing medicine Humans Sociology music Qualitative Research media_common Masculinity music.instrument Health Policy Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Gender studies Middle Aged Femininity Southeastern United States Female Social psychology |
Zdroj: | Sociology of Health & Illness. 36:91-107 |
ISSN: | 0141-9889 |
Popis: | Despite a rich body of sociological research that examines the relationship between gender and health, scholars have paid little attention to the case of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). One recent study (Sointu 2011) posits that men and women who use CAM challenge traditional ascriptions of femininity and masculinity through the exploration of self-care and emotions, respectively. Drawing on 25 in-depth interviews with middle-class Americans who use CAM, this article instead finds that men and women interpret their CAM use in ways that reproduce traditional gendered identities. Men frame their CAM use in terms of science and rationality, while simultaneously distancing themselves from feminine-coded components of CAM, such as emotions. Women seek CAM for problems such as abusive relationships, low self-esteem, and body image concerns, and frame their CAM use as a quest for self-reinvention that largely reflects and reproduces conventional femininity. Further, the reproduction of gendered identities is shaped by the participants' embrace of neoliberal tenets, such as the cultivation of personal control. This article contributes to ongoing theoretical debates about the doing, redoing and undoing of gender, as well as the literature on health and gender. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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