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417 kr
Amazon
Bokbörsen
Vi har hittat boken hos 2 butiker med verifierade priser — alla är partnerbutiker som vi får provision från när du klickar på ”Visa hos butik”. Vissa butiker visas som extern länk utan pris — priset ser du först hos butiken. Priset för dig är detsamma. Frakt kan tillkomma och varierar mellan butiker och leveranssätt — kontrollera alltid aktuellt pris och leveransvillkor hos butiken innan du slutför köpet.
Skriver du om boken på en blogg eller sajt? .
Priset har nyligen gått ner jämfört med butikens eget tidigare pris.
Det lägsta priset vi sett för boken sedan Booki började mäta.
Billigaste butiken ligger under de övriga butikernas medianpris just nu — en jämförelse mellan butiker, inte ett prisfall över tid.
Butiken med lägst pris i prislistan på boksidan just nu.
Recent debates about the health of First Nations peoples have drawn a flurry of public attention and controversy, and have placed the relationship between Aboriginal well-being and reserve locations and allotments in the spotlight. Aboriginal access to medical care and the transfer of funds and responsibility for health from the federal government to individual bands and tribal councils are also bones of contention. Comprehensive discussion of such issues, however, has often been hampered by a lack of historical analysis.Promising to remedy this is Mary-Ellen Kelm's Colonizing Bodies, which examines the impact of colonization on Aboriginal health in British Columbia during the first half of the twentieth century. Using postmodern and postcolonial conceptions of the body and the power relations of colonization, Kelm shows how a pluralistic medical system evolved. She begins by exploring the ways in which Aboriginal bodies were materially affected by Canadian Indian policy, which placed restrictions on fishing and hunting, allocated inadequate reserves, forced children into unhealthy residential schools, and criminalized Indigenous healing. She goes on to consider how humanitarianism and colonial medicine were used to pathologize Aboriginal bodies and institute a regime of doctors, hospitals, and field matrons, all working to encourage assimilation. Finally, Kelm reveals how Aboriginal people were able to resist and alter these forces in order to preserve their own cultural understanding of their bodies, disease, and medicine.This detailed but highly readable ethnohistory draws on archival sources, archeological findings, fieldwork, and oral history interviews with First Nations elders from across British Columbia. Kelm's cross-disciplinary approach results in an important and accessible book that will be of interest not only to academic historians and medical anthropologists but also to those concerned with Aboriginal health and healing today.
Bra läge att köpa
Bokus
11 kr dyrare
Rör sig ofta
Författare
Mary-Ellen Kelm
Förlag
UBC Press
Utgivningsår
1998
Format
Häftad
Sidantal
248
Språk
Engelska
Fysiska detaljer
ill.
Dewey
362.1089
ISBN
9780774806787
Av: Mary-Ellen Kelm
Lägsta pris
än övriga butiker
Bokus

417 kr
Amazon
Bokbörsen
Vi har hittat boken hos 2 butiker med verifierade priser — alla är partnerbutiker som vi får provision från när du klickar på ”Visa hos butik”. Vissa butiker visas som extern länk utan pris — priset ser du först hos butiken. Priset för dig är detsamma. Frakt kan tillkomma och varierar mellan butiker och leveranssätt — kontrollera alltid aktuellt pris och leveransvillkor hos butiken innan du slutför köpet.
Skriver du om boken på en blogg eller sajt? .
Priset har nyligen gått ner jämfört med butikens eget tidigare pris.
Det lägsta priset vi sett för boken sedan Booki började mäta.
Billigaste butiken ligger under de övriga butikernas medianpris just nu — en jämförelse mellan butiker, inte ett prisfall över tid.
Butiken med lägst pris i prislistan på boksidan just nu.
Recent debates about the health of First Nations peoples have drawn a flurry of public attention and controversy, and have placed the relationship between Aboriginal well-being and reserve locations and allotments in the spotlight. Aboriginal access to medical care and the transfer of funds and responsibility for health from the federal government to individual bands and tribal councils are also bones of contention. Comprehensive discussion of such issues, however, has often been hampered by a lack of historical analysis.Promising to remedy this is Mary-Ellen Kelm's Colonizing Bodies, which examines the impact of colonization on Aboriginal health in British Columbia during the first half of the twentieth century. Using postmodern and postcolonial conceptions of the body and the power relations of colonization, Kelm shows how a pluralistic medical system evolved. She begins by exploring the ways in which Aboriginal bodies were materially affected by Canadian Indian policy, which placed restrictions on fishing and hunting, allocated inadequate reserves, forced children into unhealthy residential schools, and criminalized Indigenous healing. She goes on to consider how humanitarianism and colonial medicine were used to pathologize Aboriginal bodies and institute a regime of doctors, hospitals, and field matrons, all working to encourage assimilation. Finally, Kelm reveals how Aboriginal people were able to resist and alter these forces in order to preserve their own cultural understanding of their bodies, disease, and medicine.This detailed but highly readable ethnohistory draws on archival sources, archeological findings, fieldwork, and oral history interviews with First Nations elders from across British Columbia. Kelm's cross-disciplinary approach results in an important and accessible book that will be of interest not only to academic historians and medical anthropologists but also to those concerned with Aboriginal health and healing today.
Bra läge att köpa
Bokus
11 kr dyrare
Rör sig ofta
Författare
Mary-Ellen Kelm
Förlag
UBC Press
Utgivningsår
1998
Format
Häftad
Sidantal
248
Språk
Engelska
Fysiska detaljer
ill.
Dewey
362.1089
ISBN
9780774806787
aboriginal health and healing in British Columbia, 1900-50
”23% billigare” visar hur mycket lägre det billigaste priset är än medianpriset hos de övriga butikerna just nu — inte ett tidsbegränsat prisfall.
ISBN 9780774806787 jämförs hos alla butiker
Recent debates about the health of First Nations peoples have drawn a flurry of public attention and controversy, and have placed the relationship between Aboriginal well-being and reserve locations and allotments in the spotlight. Aboriginal access to medical care and the transfer of funds and responsibility for health from the federal government to individual bands and tribal councils are also bones of contention. Comprehensive discussion of such issues, however, has often been hampered by a lack of historical analysis.Promising to remedy this is Mary-Ellen Kelm's Colonizing Bodies, which examines the impact of colonization on Aboriginal health in British Columbia during the first half of the twentieth century. Using postmodern and postcolonial conceptions of the body and the power relations of colonization, Kelm shows how a pluralistic medical system evolved. She begins by exploring the ways in which Aboriginal bodies were materially affected by Canadian Indian policy, which placed restrictions on fishing and hunting, allocated inadequate reserves, forced children into unhealthy residential schools, and criminalized Indigenous healing. She goes on to consider how humanitarianism and colonial medicine were used to pathologize Aboriginal bodies and institute a regime of doctors, hospitals, and field matrons, all working to encourage assimilation. Finally, Kelm reveals how Aboriginal people were able to resist and alter these forces in order to preserve their own cultural understanding of their bodies, disease, and medicine.This detailed but highly readable ethnohistory draws on archival sources, archeological findings, fieldwork, and oral history interviews with First Nations elders from across British Columbia. Kelm's cross-disciplinary approach results in an important and accessible book that will be of interest not only to academic historians and medical anthropologists but also to those concerned with Aboriginal health and healing today.
Bra läge att köpa
Bokus
11 kr dyrare
Rör sig ofta
Författare
Mary-Ellen Kelm
Förlag
UBC Press
Utgivningsår
1998
Format
Häftad
Sidantal
248
Språk
Engelska
ISBN
9780774806787
Det lägsta priset just nu är 417 kr hos Bokus, av 2 butiker vi jämför. Priser ändras löpande – kontrollera alltid slutpris och frakt hos butiken innan köp.
Priserna uppdateras automatiskt, vanligtvis minst en gång per dygn. Senaste registrerade uppdatering: 17 juli 2026.
Varje butik sätter sitt eget pris och kör olika kampanjer, så samma bok kan kosta olika mycket. Sverige har fri prissättning på böcker – därför lönar det sig att jämföra, och här ser du priserna samlade på ett ställe.
Nej. Priset vi visar är butikens bokpris – fraktkostnad tillkommer och varierar mellan butiker (flera erbjuder fri frakt över en viss summa). Den slutliga fraktkostnaden ser du i butikens kassa innan du betalar.
Ja. Sätt en kostnadsfri prisbevakning så får du besked när priset faller. Du kan också följa prisutvecklingen i prishistoriken här på sidan.
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