The Medical Culture of the Ovambo of Southern Angola and Northern Namibia select="/dri:document/dri:meta/dri:pageMeta/dri:metadata[@element='title']/node()"/>

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dc.contributor.advisor Ellen Roy en_US
dc.contributor.advisor Jervis John en_US
dc.contributor.author Davies Gwyneth en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2013-07-02T14:10:24Z
dc.date.available 2013-07-02T14:10:24Z
dc.date.issued 2004 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11070.1/4287
dc.description Includes bibliographical references en_US
dc.description.abstract Abstract provided by author at http://lucy. ukc. ac. uk/csacpub/Davies_thesis/ en_US
dc.description.abstract This thesis focusses on the medical culture of the Ovambo peoples of southern Angola and northern Namibia, a group who have been little-researched anthropologically. Because health and affliction are such poignant human concerns, the study of a society's medical culture can tell us much about their social and cultural organisation in general. It is for this reason that Ovambo medical culture has been examined in relation to the wider socio-cultural background, rather than in isolation; especially since Ovambo evidence has shown that concern about health and affliction is not confined to the physical and spiritual wellbeing of individuals, but extends to include harmonious social relations, environmental and economic prosperity, and political stability en_US
dc.description.abstract A holistic analytical approach has been adopted, whereby all aspects of the medical culture are considered (insofar as the data allow), as opposed to only certain aspects. Ovambo beliefs and practises relating to health and health maintenance are therefore discussed, as well as external (i. e. European) medical influences. Particular attention has been paid to Ovambo use of plants as medicines, as well as to their prophylactic and propitiatory measures, since these are areas of ethnomedical research that are identified as being under-researched. Focussing upon these areas has also highlighted the significance of material culture in the Ovambo medical domain, and the value of museum collections of ethnography in this regard en_US
dc.description.abstract CONTENTS (with links to PDF formated files at http://lucy. ukc. ac. uk/csacpub/Davies_thesis/) : en_US
dc.description.abstract INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER ONE:The Ovambo in Context; CHAPTER TWO:Health and Illness in Ovamboland; CHAPTER THREE:Spirits of the East and of the West; CHAPTER FOUR:Indigenous Specialists; CHAPTER FIVE:Materia Medica; CHAPTER SIX:Prophylaxis and Propitiation; CONCLUSION; BIBLIOGRAPHY; APPENDICES: Appendix 1: Tables of Diseases for Chapter 2; Appendix 2: Kwanyama Symptomatology and Nosology; Anatomy and Physiology; Appendix 3: Ovambo Plant Nomenclature and Classification; Appendix 4: Ovambo Medicinal Plants and Materia Medica Powell-Cotton Angola Collection 1936-7; Appendix 5: Tables of Ovambo Medicine Types for Chapter 5 en_US
dc.format.extent 320 p en_US
dc.language.iso eng en_US
dc.subject Ethnomedicine en_US
dc.subject Ovambo culture en_US
dc.subject Medical plants en_US
dc.title The Medical Culture of the Ovambo of Southern Angola and Northern Namibia en_US
dc.type thesis en_US
dc.description.degree Canterbury en_US
dc.description.degree United Kingdom en_US
dc.description.degree University of Kent en_US
dc.description.degree Ph D en_US
dc.masterFileNumber 2615 en_US


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