ABSTRACT

The relationships between religion, spirituality, health, biomedical institutions, complementary, and alternative healing systems are widely discussed today. While many of these debates revolve around the biomedical legitimacy of religious modes of healing, the market for them continues to grow. The Routledge Handbook of Religion, Medicine, and Health is an outstanding reference source to the key topics, problems, and debates in this exciting subject and is the first collection of its kind. Comprising over thirty-five chapters by a team of international contributors, the Handbook is divided into five parts:

  • Healing practices with religious roots and frames
  • Religious actors in and around the medical field
  • Organizing infrastructures of religion and medicine: pluralism and competition
  • Boundary-making between religion and medicine
  • Religion and epidemics

Within these sections, central issues, debates and problems are examined, including health and healing, religiosity, spirituality, biomedicine, medicalization, complementary medicine, medical therapy, efficacy, agency, and the nexus of body, mind, and spirit.

The Routledge Handbook of Religion, Medicine, and Health is essential reading for students and researchers in religious studies. The Handbook will also be very useful for those in related fields, such as sociology, anthropology, and medicine.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Critical approaches to the entanglement of religion, medicine, and healing

part I|144 pages

Healing practices with religious roots and frames

chapter 1|14 pages

Afro-Atlantic healing practices

chapter 2|14 pages

Ayurveda

The modern faces of ‘Vedic’ healing and sacred science

chapter 3|13 pages

Curanderismo in the Americas

chapter 9|15 pages

Traditional Chinese medicine

History, ethnography, and practice

chapter 10|14 pages

Unani medicine

Health, religion, and politics in colonial India

part II|135 pages

Religious actors in and around the medical field

chapter 11|14 pages

Diagnosing materialism

Ayurvedic purification regimens as spiritual cure

chapter 14|15 pages

Muslim healthcare chaplaincy in North America and Europe

Professionalizing a communal obligation

chapter 15|14 pages

Charismatic healers

Embodied practices in US and Singaporean megachurches

chapter 16|15 pages

Energy healing

Reiki, Therapeutic Touch, and Healing Touch in the United States and beyond

chapter 17|14 pages

Gurus and healing

Amma (Mata Amritanandamyi) at the intersection of miracles and medicine

chapter 18|18 pages

Medical missionaries and witch doctors

Protestant object lessons in biomedicine in Africa and the South Pacific

part III|97 pages

Organizing infrastructures of religion and medicine

chapter 20|15 pages

Digital tools for fertility awareness

Family planning, health, religion, and feminine embodiment

chapter 21|14 pages

The Internet as infrastructure for healing

The case of spirit possession in Japan

chapter 22|14 pages

Markets of medicine

Orthodox medicine, complementary and alternative medicine, and religion in Britain

chapter 23|13 pages

Medical pluralism in policy and practice

The case of Malaysia

chapter 26|12 pages

Religious entrepreneurs in the health market

Opportunities in a field dominated by biomedicine

part IV|104 pages

Boundary-making between religion and medicine

chapter 27|15 pages

Policing the boundaries of medical science

Causality, evidence, and the question of religion

chapter 28|15 pages

Competing religious and biomedical notions of treatment

The case of blood transfusion refusals

chapter 29|14 pages

Ayurveda (re-)invented

Engagements with science and religion in colonial India

chapter 31|14 pages

Religion, culture, and the politics of vaccine hesitancy

Perspectives of parents, pundits, and physicians

part V|32 pages

Religion and epidemics

chapter 35|7 pages

Defying responsibility

Modes of silence, religious symbolism, and biopolitics in the COVID-19 pandemic

chapter 38|4 pages

A cultural map of the pandemic