This work describes and characterises four medicinal practices used by members of a transnational movement to reinvigorate Amerindian spiritual traditions in southern Chile. We discuss the historical, archaeological, linguistic and ethnographic frames of reference of each of these practices and underline the significations assigned to them in terms of health and welfare. We likewise identify aspects of the structure, function, contexts and uses in which these practices are deployed, both in the traditional context and the current context in which they were observed. Finally, we infer some of their significant properties, on the basis of which the existence of spiritual medicine can be sustained
In 2003, the Newen Pu Lafkenche, a Mapuche Organization of South-Center Chile, signed an agreement w...
The social changes of globalization and the loss of socio-cultural identity have contributed to a pr...
This paper introduces the European Commission-funded project ‘MEDICINE: Indigenous Concepts of Healt...
Se describen y caracterizan cuatro prácticas medicinales desplegadas por miembros de un movimiento t...
In order to survive assimilative pressures since the time of colonization, the marginalized Mapuche ...
In Chile two mains forms of health care are being used by both Chileans and indigenous people, the t...
This paper explores the paradox of multicultural neoliberalism in Chile during the last two decades ...
© Interciencia 2011. We present research results on health policies aimed at the Aymara people of No...
This article aims to identify how the coexistence between indigenous and Spanish medical practices d...
In this article, I explore different visual practices performed by Pehuenche Indigenous healers and ...
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17227/01234870.41folios157.168 This article presents a state of the art o...
In recent years, the popularity of traditional Mapuche medicine has increased drastically among non-...
Perceptions of health and illness vary depending on culture, tradition, history, ethnicity and ident...
Crossing boundaries is a well-known practice for Aymara people living in northern Chile, Peru and Bo...
Intercultural health highlights the question of how to perform indigenous identity in the context of...
In 2003, the Newen Pu Lafkenche, a Mapuche Organization of South-Center Chile, signed an agreement w...
The social changes of globalization and the loss of socio-cultural identity have contributed to a pr...
This paper introduces the European Commission-funded project ‘MEDICINE: Indigenous Concepts of Healt...
Se describen y caracterizan cuatro prácticas medicinales desplegadas por miembros de un movimiento t...
In order to survive assimilative pressures since the time of colonization, the marginalized Mapuche ...
In Chile two mains forms of health care are being used by both Chileans and indigenous people, the t...
This paper explores the paradox of multicultural neoliberalism in Chile during the last two decades ...
© Interciencia 2011. We present research results on health policies aimed at the Aymara people of No...
This article aims to identify how the coexistence between indigenous and Spanish medical practices d...
In this article, I explore different visual practices performed by Pehuenche Indigenous healers and ...
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17227/01234870.41folios157.168 This article presents a state of the art o...
In recent years, the popularity of traditional Mapuche medicine has increased drastically among non-...
Perceptions of health and illness vary depending on culture, tradition, history, ethnicity and ident...
Crossing boundaries is a well-known practice for Aymara people living in northern Chile, Peru and Bo...
Intercultural health highlights the question of how to perform indigenous identity in the context of...
In 2003, the Newen Pu Lafkenche, a Mapuche Organization of South-Center Chile, signed an agreement w...
The social changes of globalization and the loss of socio-cultural identity have contributed to a pr...
This paper introduces the European Commission-funded project ‘MEDICINE: Indigenous Concepts of Healt...