Maya Bonesetters
Manual Healers in a Changing Guatemala
Servando Z Hinojosa author Servando G Hinojosa illustrator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Texas Press
Published:28th Feb '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Hardback£74.00(9781477320280)
This book provides a comprehensive study of bonesetting in Guatemala, highlighting its cultural significance and the challenges faced by practitioners within a changing medical landscape.
The book Maya Bonesetters provides an in-depth exploration of bonesetting practices in Guatemala, highlighting a crucial yet often overlooked aspect of Maya healing traditions. Through a detailed ethnographic lens, the author Servando Z. Hinojosa sheds light on the cultural significance of bonesetters, who have historically been excluded from discussions about traditional health practitioners. This work aims to fill that gap by presenting an extensive portrait of these healers and their practices within the contemporary medical landscape of Guatemala.
Hinojosa's research is grounded in fieldwork conducted in highland Guatemala, where he introduces readers to the Kaqchikel and Tz’utujiil Maya bonesetters. The book delves into their diagnostic and treatment methods, juxtaposing empirical techniques with sacred beliefs. This contrast reveals the complexities of the healing approaches employed by these practitioners and emphasizes the importance of understanding their role in community health. The author illustrates how bonesetters are not only preserving traditional practices but are also adapting to the evolving medical environment.
Ultimately, Maya Bonesetters argues that, despite facing challenges from the biomedical community, the cultural relevance of bonesetting persists among the Maya people. Hinojosa's work underscores the need to recognize and appreciate the diverse healing traditions that coexist in Guatemala, ensuring that the future of bonesetting remains a vital part of the cultural tapestry.
[A] well-written, well-researched ethnograpy of bonesetting among Guatemalan Maya…Recommended. * CHOICE *
[Maya Bonesetters] is an important document of an often overlooked Indigenous healing practice that will be of interest to scholars and students of medical anthropology, Mesoamerica, and anyone with an interest in contemporary health care challenges in Latin America. * Journal of Anthropological Research *
[Maya Bonesetters] adds rich detail to our understanding of the accommodations that Indigenous healers often make to the challenge of biomedicine, how they will accept and integrate into their practice new ideas, new terminology, new medicines, and even new technology...This is a strong work presenting ideas about the contemporary context of Indigenous medicine that approaches the topic from the angle of empiricism and pragmatism. As a contribution to the anthropology of healing it is invaluable. Scholars of the Maya will find great value here as Hinojosa takes the reader into the villages and therapeutic spaces of pain and suffering that are relatively undocumented. * Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research *
Maya Bonesetters should appeal to anthropologists and those in the disciplines of natural medicine, indigenous healers like curanderas, and individuals with traditional healing in their ancestral memories...This is a fascinating book for use by anthropologists focused on the Americas, and is a resource for those in other disciplines, sociology, psychology, with an interest in natural healing and its connection to social and mental health...Without a doubt, this is a highly absorbing book. * Journal of Global South Studies *
The most important contribution of this book is its focus on a healing tradition that has not received the academic attention it deserves...In his convincing discussion of the injustice of this omission, Hinojosa restores the bonesetters to a valued position in Mesoamerican ethnology and medical anthropology in general...this study represents an advance in recognition of indigenous healing knowledge and techniques. As indigenous knowledge is increasingly valued, the bonesetters and their skills in diagnosing injuries, massaging muscles and restoring movement will be more widely accepted, not only in Guatemala but around the world. This book is more than a first approximation to this healing tradition and the changes it is facing in its coexistence with biomedicine; it is also a tribute to this important area of humanity’s knowledge. * Social Anthropology *
ISBN: 9781477320297
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm
Weight: 399g
256 pages