Hardback - £94.00

Publication date:

04 May 2017

Length of book:

244 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

240x159mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781498552110

The chapters in Foundations of Biosocial Health: Stigma and Illness Interactions, drawn primarily from medical anthropology, highlight the diverse ways in which various stigmatized health conditions interact with social inequalities and stigma to form syndemics. The authors delineate multiple examples of stigma-driven syndemics to demonstrate both the nature of disease interactions and how stigma contributes to, promotes, exacerbates, or perpetuates a syndemic. In so doing, the authors also address how stigma translates from a social condition to various biological conditions. The authors’ contributions cover a variety of topics, including HIV, substance use, obesity, depression, homelessness, poverty,and political oppression. This book is recommended for scholars of anthropology, sociology, psychology, political science, and public health.
In content this volume is clear and thematically coherent.... [T] he authors are to be congratulated on their international perspective.... This volume makes a persuasive case for the expansion of research into this area. This book would be of particular interest to those familiar with the theoretical traditions on which it is founded. With its substantial theoretical content, this text would be most useful to scholars and postgraduate students who are interested in research that focuses on the intersections of contemporary social theory, health and illness and medical sociology. I eagerly await the next instalment in this volume.