ABSTRACT

What do we mean by 'gender' and how does this relate to health?
How is 'biology' best understood?
What does a focus on the division of labour bring to our understanding of health work?
Is (gender) 'equity' in health possible?
How have developments such as the resurgence of emotions and the new genetics affected these and other social relations at the turn of the century?
These are just some of the questions addressed in Gender, Health and Healing in which a whole range of issues are brought together and connected to emerging concerns in contemporary life such as the new genetics and transformations in biomedical knowledge and practices. It offers a challenging assessment of gender relations and embodied practices across the public/private divide, using health and healing as paradigmatic examples.
This thought-provoking volume lies at the intersection of gender studies, the sociology of health and healing, health policy, the critical analysis of scientific knowledge and the current debates around the body, health and emotions. Bringing together new and leading scholars in the field, it provides a unique critical overview of contemporary debates in health care for an interdisciplinary readership.

part I|77 pages

Biology ‘Revisited' and Human Reproduction

chapter 1|21 pages

Corporeal Reflections On the Biological

Reductionism, Constructionism and Beyond

chapter 2|15 pages

Anchoring the Head

The Disappearing (Biological) Body

chapter 4|20 pages

Why Turn to Speculative Fiction?

On Reconceiving Feminist Research for the Twenty-First Century

part II|92 pages

Gender (in)Equality and (Emotional) Division of Labour

chapter 5|16 pages

What About the Girl Next Door?

Gender and the Politics of Professional Self-Regulation

chapter 6|20 pages

Reflections On Women's Unpaid Health Work

Selective Use of Packages of Care

chapter 7|17 pages

Shouldering the Burden

Health Work in the Locality: The Case of Funeral Directing

chapter 8|19 pages

The Archaeology of Psychiatric Disorder

Gender and Disorders of Thought, Emotion and Behaviour

chapter 9|18 pages

Experiences of ADHD

Children, Health Research and Emotion Work

part III|103 pages

Health Care in Transition

chapter 10|15 pages

Gender Equity in Health *

Debates and Dilemmas

chapter 12|24 pages

Integrated Medicine

An Examination of Gp–complementary Practitioner Collaboration

chapter 14|13 pages

Resisting ‘Fatal Unclutteredness'

Conceptualising the Sociology of Health and Illness Into the Millennium

chapter |17 pages

Concluding Comments