Research Trends and Prospects of Medical Anthropology: Concepts and Their Intersection with History of Medicine
10.13081/kjmh.2020.29.903
- Author:
Eunkyung YOON
1
;
Taewoo KIM
Author Information
1. HK+ Institute for Integrated Medical Humanities, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea
- Publication Type:Special Issue Article
- From:Korean Journal of Medical History
2020;29(3):903-958
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
This study explores the history of research in Medical Anthropology by examining key concepts in the field with a focus on their relevance with findings from the field of History of Medicine. The concepts discussed in this paper are Medical Pluralism, Social Suffering, Biopolitics, and Care. Since concepts internalize the ethnographic gaze, what this paper aims is to trace the development of the gaze on a historical axis. Although concepts come from a specific historical period, they are by no means exclusive to it, as they are revisited again and again through various discourses. In other words, the insight that the previous meaning of a concept has grasped is instilled into the revisited concept. In this way, concepts engage in historical communication, create intersections with the interests of History of Medicine. By discussing these intersections with each concept, this paper suggests the complementary roles of the two fields and their approach to historical events and phenomena.