Abstract
This article examines healing practices among the rural inhabitants of Tucumán in the opening quarter of the twentieth century through a reading of the 1921 National Folklore Survey. It argues that popular medical practices, referred to as curanderismos (popular healing), continued into the twentieth century not only as cultural practice of the popular classes but as necessity due to limited investments in public health in the rural regions on the part of the national and provincial government.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Dimas, C. S. (2019). The Health of the Rurality: The Encuesta de Folklore and Popular Healing Practices in Tucumán, 1921. Bulletin of Latin American Research, 38(1), 5–18. https://doi.org/10.1111/blar.12669
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