Available Formats
Breathtaking: Asthma Care in a Time of Climate Change
By (Author) Alison Kenner
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
6th November 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
Respiratory medicine
Health systems and services
362.196238
Hardback
248
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 25mm
Analyzing asthma care in the twenty-first century Asthma is not a new problem, but today the disease is being reshaped by changing ecologies, healthcare systems, medical sciences, and built environments. A global epidemic, asthma (and our efforts to control it) demands an analysis attentive to its complexity, its contextual nature, and the care
"This elegant first monograph from the Asthma Files Project is written simply for all audiences and provides five practical recommendations. Breathtaking is social science at its best: experiential, explanatory, critical, and providing ways forward. Alison Kenner herself is an active participant as community social-scientist and as partner to someone who suffers disordered breathing. She guides us vividly across scales and registers."Michael M.J. Fischer, author of Anthropology in the Meantime
"Breathtaking is a sweeping ethnographic account of asthma and its treatments that expertly traverses questions of lived experience, medical technology, and critical ecology as they bear on the epidemic of disordered breathing. Beautifully written and poignant, this book makes a robust contribution to our understanding of the health effects of environmental degradation and climate change, deepens the critiques of biomedicalization, and heralds the promise of complementary and alternative medicine."Anthony Ryan Hatch, author of Blood Sugar
"Breathtaking is an engrossing read."CHOICE
"Breathtaking presents a compelling and very readable ethnographic overview of the ways that asthma is grappled with across a variety of 21st century American contexts. This book offers an insightful and multi-faceted account of a condition that affects so many around the world."Somatosphere
"Overall, Breathtaking takes asthma from the biomedical world, and using a multi-sited ethnography, traces connections between the experience of asthma, the environment and our bodies, allowing us to imagine new carescapes that could make the world more breathable."LSE Review of Books
"In the absence of swift and uncompromising action on the part of US legislators to combat climate change, Kenner advocates democratizing access to affordable health care; integrating breathing training into the doctors toolkit; and enacting policy, at all levels of government, to improve the indoor environments in which we spend the majority of our time."H-Environment
Alison Kenner is assistant professor in the department of politics and the Center for Science, Technology, and Society at Drexel University.