This paper examines lay accounts of illness and health gathered -by means of eight focus groups - from people living in two Cantonese-speaking communities in England. The authors concentrate on the manner in which Cantonese speakers recruit and mobilise various agents - such as traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), spirits, demons, food and the weather - to describe and explain aspects of their bodily and mental wellbeing. As well as providing information on what Cantonese speakers say about such matters, the data are also used to indicate how a concentration on 'accounts', rather than on 'beliefs', enables sociology to side-step a concern with the subjective and psychological and to focus, instead, on what is publicly available and verifiable.
CITATION STYLE
Prior, L., Chun, P. L., & Huat, S. B. (2000). Beliefs and accounts of illness. Views from two Cantonese-speaking communities in England. Sociology of Health and Illness, 22(6), 815–839. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.00232
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