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dc.contributor.authorSherpa, Yeshe
dc.date.accessioned2024-02-09T18:47:19Z
dc.date.available2024-02-09T18:47:19Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12648/14143
dc.description.abstractThe human body is deeply rooted as being a complex entity. "A soul must always find its way back into the rightful body," (Lama, personal communication, December 17th, 2018). For many western doctors, this may mean nothing; however, for those who believe in the natural world, this is their entire existence. This study outlines concepts of the way our bodies, especially an immigrant's body, is negotiated as they enter into the western bio-medical gaze. It analyses how bodies are conceptualized through modernity when dealing with medicine, healing, and dying. The research explores the ramification of health by changes in location as people leave their homeland and are forced to a new lifestyle. There is a clash between allopathic and homeopathic medicine, leaving a gap for those who do not see the efficacy of the other. By highlighting their perceptions on allopathic versus homeopathic medical practices among the Himalayan immigrants in NYC, in addition to analyzing interviews and participant ethnography, we will uncover the cultural apparatus of life, death, and liminality in a time of healing found in cultural rituals.   
dc.subjectFirst Reader Lisa Jean Moore
dc.subjectSenior Project
dc.subjectSemester Spring 2019
dc.titleMedicine, Healing, and Mourning: Cultural Negotiations of Immigrants Under the Western Bio-Medical Gaze
dc.typeSenior Project
refterms.dateFOA2024-02-09T18:47:19Z
dc.description.institutionPurchase College SUNY
dc.description.departmentAnthropology
dc.description.degreelevelBachelor of Arts
dc.description.advisorMoore, Lisa Jean
dc.date.semesterSpring 2019
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