Pastoral clinic : addiction and dispossession along the Rio Grande / Angela Garcia.
Material type: TextPublication details: Berkeley : University of California Press, c2010.Description: xv, 248 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.;PbkISBN:- 9780520262089 (pbk. : alk. paper)
- 362.29309 GAR 22
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | H.T. Parekh Library | SIAS Collection | 362.29309 GAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | K2415 |
Browsing H.T. Parekh Library shelves, Collection: SIAS Collection Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
362.292092 KNA Drinking: a love story / | 362.293 KOU History of intoxication: opium in Assam, 1800-1959 / | 362.293 ROC Rock Bottom: Beyond Drug Addiction / | 362.29309 GAR Pastoral clinic : | 362.3 TIL Destination unknown: a case description of a mentally handicapped daughter / | 362.4 COL Disability, liberation, and development / | 362.4 DIS Disability studies reader / |
$29.95
TB/236/210720
Includes bibliographical references (p. 233-235) and index.
Introduction --
Graveyard --
The elegiac addict --
Blood relative --
Suicide as a form of life --
Experiments with care --
Conclusion: a new season.
The Pastoral Clinic takes us on a penetrating journey into an iconic Western landscape—northern New Mexico's Española Valley, home to highest rate of heroin addiction and fatal overdoses in the United States. In a luminous narrative, Angela Garcia chronicles the lives of several Hispano addicts, introducing us to the intimate, physical, and institutional dependencies in which they are entangled. We discover how history pervades this region that has endured centuries of material and cultural dispossession, and we come to see its heroin problem as a contemporary expression of these conditions, as well as a manifestation of the human desire to be released from them. Lyrically evoking the Espanola Valley and its residents through conversations, encounters, and recollections, The Pastoral Clinic is at once a devastating portrait of addiction, a rich ethnography of place, and an eloquent call for a new ethics of care.
There are no comments on this title.