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Medical borderlands: engineering the body with plastic surgery and hormonal therapies in Brazil.

Authors :
Edmonds, Alexander
Sanabria, Emilia
Source :
Anthropology & Medicine. Aug2014, Vol. 21 Issue 2, p202-216. 15p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

This paper explores medical borderlands where health and enhancement practices are entangled. It draws on fieldwork carried out in the context of two distinct research projects in Brazil on plastic surgery and sex hormone therapies. These two therapies have significant clinical overlap. Both are made available in private and public healthcare in ways that reveal the class dynamics underlying Brazilian medicine. They also have an important experimental dimension rooted in Brazil's regulatory context and societal expectations placed on medicine as a means for managing women's reproductive and sexual health. Off-label and experimental medical use of these treatments is linked to experimentalsocialuse: how women adopt them to respond to the pressures, anxieties and aspirations of work and intimate life. The paper argues that these experimental techniques are becoming morally authorized as routine management of women's health, integrated into mainstream Ob-Gyn healthcare, and subtly blurred with practices ofcuidar-se(self-care) seen in Brazil as essential for modern femininity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13648470
Volume :
21
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Anthropology & Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
97806376
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/13648470.2014.918933