Lexington Books
Pages: 272
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7391-7366-4 • Hardback • June 2013 • $113.00 • (£87.00)
978-1-4985-1510-8 • Paperback • March 2015 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-7367-1 • eBook • June 2013 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Emily S. Wu is a college instructor in the San Francisco Bay area and teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in Asian religions and cultures. Her current research primarily focuses on Chinese and Chinese American religious practices and beliefs that intersect with medicine, healing, and understandings of the human body.
Preface
Personal Beginning
Introduction
Chapter 1: Contextualization
Chapter 2: History of Local TCM
Chapter 3: Medical Training and Identity Formation
Chapter 4: TCM Healers in the Chinese Community
Chapter 5: TCM as Complementary Medicine
Chapter 6: TCM as Alternative Medicine
Chapter 7: Creating a Space for Psychic Healing
Chapter 8: Going to the Culturally Authentic
Chapter 9: Environmentalism and Lifestyle Changes
Chapter 10: The Happenings in an Acupuncture Clinic
Chapter 11: The Embodied Spirituality of Qi
Chapter 12: Ideal Body and the Concept of Health
Chapter 13: Concluding Analysis
Traditional Chinese Medicine in the United States is an insightful and captivating ethnography of Chinese medicine practitioners in the San Francisco Bay area, one that reveals their socialization as students and experiences as clinicians into a world where East meets West perhaps more so than in any place in the United States. Religious studies scholar Emily S. Wu has written a masterful cultural interpretive or phenomenological examination of both Asian American and European American practitioners who have sought to adapt the psychic, spiritual, cultural, and environmental insights of an ancient medical tradition to a post-modern society where many people have sought meaningful alternatives or complements to Western biomedicine which all too still remains reductionist in its treatment of illness and the healing of the body politic. Her book makes an important contribution to the study of medical pluralism and complementary and alternative medical systems in American society.
— Hans Baer, University of Melbourne
Emily Wu’s Traditional Chinese Medicine in the United States makes a key contribution to the growing body of literature on Chinese Medicine in the United States, with a focus on San Francisco. This highly readable work takes us through the world of the city’s practitioners, while deftly tracing the history of the medicine in California and the impact of such cultural factors as racial politics, steps taken to establish the medicine’s legitimacy, the impact of HIV/AIDS, and new developments like the Community Acupuncture movement. The transmission of the tradition in its different forms and branches, the fluctuating relationships with biomedicine, the fluid understandings of science, and practitioners’ different approaches to the spiritual dimension of human existence and self-cultivation practices combine to further enrich Wu’s discussion. An excellent addition to the field.
— Linda L. Barnes, Boston University