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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Elisabeth Hsu , Stephen HarrisPublisher: Berghahn Books Imprint: Berghahn Books Volume: v. 6 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.612kg ISBN: 9781845450601ISBN 10: 1845450604 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 01 September 2010 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations List of Tables List of Contributors Introduction Elisabeth Hsu History Editorial introduction Stephen Harris Chapter 1. Non-native plants and their medicinal uses Stephen Harris Chapter 2. Qinghao .. (Herba Artemisiae annuae) in the Chinese materia medica Elisabeth Hsu (in consultation with Frederic Obringer) Anthropology Editorial introduction Stephen Harris Chapter 3. Shamanic plants and gender in the Peruvian Upper Amazon Francoise Barbira Freedman Chapter 4. Persons, plants and relations: treating childhood illness in a western Kenyan village P. Wenzel Geissler and Ruth J. Prince Plant Portraits Editorial introduction Stephen Harris Chapter 5. East goes West. Ginkgo biloba and dementia Sir John Grimley Evans Chapter 6. Medicinal, stimulant and ritual plant use: an ethnobotany of caffeine-containing plants Caroline S. Weckerle, Verena Timbul and Philip Blumenshine IndexReviewsThis collection, the sixth in a renowned series in the epistemology of healing, explores how plant knowledge is incorporated into human social life. The collection is unique for its detailed attention to the botany and often pharmaceutical analysis of the plants combined in equal measures with contextualized observations about how these factors are culturally constructed both by laboratory scientists and local communities. . Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale .. .the book offers a platform to raise thought-provoking questions and encourages in-depth analyses to bridge the gulf between ethnobotany and medical anthropology...Highly recommended. . Choice This book, intended for lay audiences, provides a well illustrated portrait of several popular medicinal plant species and their societal interaction. The introduction provides a significant theoretical contribution towards the intersection of the fields of study surrounding medicinal plant utilization... [It] is an outstanding model of interdisciplinary scholarship and is a welcome contribution to our knowledge of the dynamic social construction of medicinal plant use. The diversity of perspectives included within the discussion of these phytotherapeutic remedies makes this an enticing work for those interested in ethnomedicines and the influences that direct their utilization. . Anthropos The tantalising and rather eclectic selection of edited chapters takes the reader around the world following plants making their way into local pharmacopoeias, symbolic systems, myths and ways of coping with the unknowns of human illness. This book offers a much needed, concise edited volume on plants, health and healing. It brings together research in the disciplines of botany, biochemistry, clinical medicine, anthropology and history highlighting the contributions of multidisciplinary research to promote a more nuanced understanding of medicinal plant use. . JRAI Finally, with this book a longstanding void in the literature has been filled! Although the uses of medicinal plants and their related cultural history have always attracted lay and scientific communities, until now there has been very little research done on the interface of ethnobotany and medical anthropology. The authors ((ethno-)botanists, medical anthropologists, clinician) link these disciplines with outstanding contributions by digging through historical aspects...and anthropological...and through plant portraits...A remarkable part of the book is the introduction to the book by E. Hsu where she explores the interface between the two disciplines in depth. . Barbara Frei Haller, Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland -This collection, the sixth in a renowned series in the epistemology of healing, explores how plant knowledge is incorporated into human social life. The collection is unique for its detailed attention to the botany and often pharmaceutical analysis of the plants combined in equal measures with contextualized observations about how these factors are culturally constructed both by laboratory scientists and local communities.- - Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale -...the book offers a platform to raise thought-provoking questions and encourages in-depth analyses to bridge the gulf between ethnobotany and medical anthropology...Highly recommended.- - Choice -This book, intended for lay audiences, provides a well illustrated portrait of several popular medicinal plant species and their societal interaction. The introduction provides a significant theoretical contribution towards the intersection of the fields of study surrounding medicinal plant utilization... [It] is an outstanding model of interdisciplinary scholarship and is a welcome contribution to our knowledge of the dynamic social construction of medicinal plant use. The diversity of perspectives included within the discussion of these phytotherapeutic remedies makes this an enticing work for those interested in ethnomedicines and the influences that direct their utilization.- - Anthropos -The tantalising and rather eclectic selection of edited chapters takes the reader around the world following plants making their way into local pharmacopoeias, symbolic systems, myths and ways of coping with the unknowns of human illness. This book offers a much needed, concise edited volume on plants, health and healing. It brings together research in the disciplines of botany, biochemistry, clinical medicine, anthropology and history highlighting the contributions of multidisciplinary research to promote a more nuanced understanding of medicinal plant use.- - JRAI -Finally, with this book a longstanding void in the literature has been filled! Although the uses of medicinal plants and their related cultural history have always attracted lay and scientific communities, until now there has been very little research done on the interface of ethnobotany and medical anthropology. The authors ((ethno-)botanists, medical anthropologists, clinician) link these disciplines with outstanding contributions by digging through historical aspects...and anthropological...and through plant portraits...A remarkable part of the book is the introduction to the book by E. Hsu where she explores the interface between the two disciplines in depth.- - Barbara Frei Haller, Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland <em>This collection, the sixth in a renowned series in the epistemology of healing, explores how plant knowledge is incorporated into human social life. The collection is unique for its detailed attention to the botany and often pharmaceutical analysis of the plants combined in equal measures with contextualized observations about how these factors are culturally constructed both by laboratory scientists and local communities.</em> <b> - </b> <strong>Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale</strong></p> .. .<em>the book offers a platform to raise thought-provoking questions and encourages in-depth analyses to bridge the gulf between ethnobotany and medical anthropology...Highly recommended.</em> <b> - </b> <strong>Choice</strong></p> <em>This book, intended for lay audiences, provides a well illustrated portrait of several popular medicinal plant species and their societal interaction. The introduction provides a significant theoretical contribution towards the intersection of the fields of study surrounding medicinal plant utilization... [It] is an outstanding model of interdisciplinary scholarship and is a welcome contribution to our knowledge of the dynamic social construction of medicinal plant use. The diversity of perspectives included within the discussion of these phytotherapeutic remedies makes this an enticing work for those interested in ethnomedicines and the influences that direct their utilization.</em> <b> - </b> <strong>Anthropos</strong></p> <em>The tantalising and rather eclectic selection of edited chapters takes the reader around the world following plants making their way into local pharmacopoeias, symbolic systems, myths and ways of coping with the unknowns of human illness. This book offers a much needed, concise edited volume on plants, health and healing. It brings together research in the disciplines of botany, biochemistry, clinical medicine, anthropology and history highlighting the contributions of multidisciplinary research to promote a more nuanced understanding of medicinal plant use.</em> <b> - </b> <strong>JRAI</strong></p> <em> Finally, with this book a longstanding void in the literature has been filled! Although the uses of medicinal plants and their related cultural history have always attracted lay and scientific communities, until now there has been very little research done on the interface of ethnobotany and medical anthropology. The authors ((ethno-)botanists, medical anthropologists, clinician) link these disciplines with outstanding contributions by digging through historical aspects...and anthropological...and through plant portraits...A remarkable part of the book is the introduction to the book by E. Hsu where she explores the interface between the two disciplines in depth.</em> <b>- </b> <strong>Barbara Frei Haller</strong>, Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland</p> This collection, the sixth in a renowned series in the epistemology of healing, explores how plant knowledge is incorporated into human social life. The collection is unique for its detailed attention to the botany and often pharmaceutical analysis of the plants combined in equal measures with contextualized observations about how these factors are culturally constructed both by laboratory scientists and local communities. - Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale .. .the book offers a platform to raise thought-provoking questions and encourages in-depth analyses to bridge the gulf between ethnobotany and medical anthropology...Highly recommended. - Choice This book, intended for lay audiences, provides a well illustrated portrait of several popular medicinal plant species and their societal interaction. The introduction provides a significant theoretical contribution towards the intersection of the fields of study surrounding medicinal plant utilization... [It] is an outstanding model of interdisciplinary scholarship and is a welcome contribution to our knowledge of the dynamic social construction of medicinal plant use. The diversity of perspectives included within the discussion of these phytotherapeutic remedies makes this an enticing work for those interested in ethnomedicines and the influences that direct their utilization. - Anthropos The tantalising and rather eclectic selection of edited chapters takes the reader around the world following plants making their way into local pharmacopoeias, symbolic systems, myths and ways of coping with the unknowns of human illness. This book offers a much needed, concise edited volume on plants, health and healing. It brings together research in the disciplines of botany, biochemistry, clinical medicine, anthropology and history highlighting the contributions of multidisciplinary research to promote a more nuanced understanding of medicinal plant use. - JRAI Finally, with this book a longstanding void in the literature has been filled! Although the uses of medicinal plants and their related cultural history have always attracted lay and scientific communities, until now there has been very little research done on the interface of ethnobotany and medical anthropology. The authors ((ethno-)botanists, medical anthropologists, clinician) link these disciplines with outstanding contributions by digging through historical aspects...and anthropological...and through plant portraits...A remarkable part of the book is the introduction to the book by E. Hsu where she explores the interface between the two disciplines in depth. - Barbara Frei Haller, Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland Author InformationElisabeth Hsu is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Oxford, where she has convened its master’s courses in medical anthropology since 2001. Based on her earlier studies in biology (botany), linguistics and sinology, she has published widely on the history and anthropology of Chinese medicine. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |