{"@context":{"@vocab":"https://cir.nii.ac.jp/schema/1.0/","rdfs":"http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#","dc":"http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/","dcterms":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/","foaf":"http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/","prism":"http://prismstandard.org/namespaces/basic/2.0/","cinii":"http://ci.nii.ac.jp/ns/1.0/","datacite":"https://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/","ndl":"http://ndl.go.jp/dcndl/terms/","jpcoar":"https://github.com/JPCOAR/schema/blob/master/2.0/"},"@id":"https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1360011144097597440.json","@type":"Article","productIdentifier":[{"identifier":{"@type":"DOI","@value":"10.1017/cbo9780511521072"}}],"dc:title":[{"@value":"The Huli Response to Illness"}],"description":[{"type":"abstract","notation":[{"@value":"<jats:p>Dr Frankel's study of the rapid transformation of traditional medical care among the Huli of New Guinea by Western treatments strikingly combines the methods of social anthropology and epidemiology. Until the 1950s the Huli used only their own form of therapy, including symptomatic treatments, specialist surgery and major ritual intended to enlist the support of spirits. Since then, superficially at least, there has been a rejection of many traditional measures and a corresponding enthusiasm for Western treatments underpinned by Christianity. The Huli Response to Illness analyses the rich network of traditional belief relating to the classification and causation of illness, patterns of disease, historical experience, and the organisation of society. The methodological approach presented is notable not only for the study of medical pluralism, but also for examining the conditions which may influence responses to programmes of health improvement. The study as a whole integrates material conventionally divided between anthropological and medical texts and powerfully demonstrates the limitations of this traditional separation.</jats:p>"}]}],"creator":[{"@id":"https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1380011144097597440","@type":"Researcher","foaf:name":[{"@value":"Stephen Frankel"}]}],"publication":{"publicationIdentifier":[{"@type":"ISBN","@value":"9780521325240"},{"@type":"ISBN","@value":"9780521619660"},{"@type":"ISBN","@value":"9780511521072"}],"dc:publisher":[{"@value":"Cambridge University Press"}],"prism:publicationDate":"1986-11-13"},"reviewed":"false","dc:rights":["https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms"],"createdAt":"2009-12-22","modifiedAt":"2022-10-14","relatedProduct":[{"@id":"https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1360004229896941056","@type":"Article","resourceType":"学術雑誌論文(journal article)","relationType":["isReferencedBy"],"jpcoar:relatedTitle":[{"@value":"Association between sex inequality in animal protein intake and economic development in the <scp>P</scp>apua <scp>N</scp>ew <scp>G</scp>uinea highlands: The carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of scalp hair and fingernail"}]},{"@id":"https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1390001205005491968","@type":"Article","resourceType":"学術雑誌論文(journal article)","relationType":["isReferencedBy"],"jpcoar:relatedTitle":[{"@language":"ja","@value":"人類生態学はフィールド調査をどう記録するか"},{"@language":"en","@value":"Recording adaptation system of human populations: the strategies of human ecology fieldworks"},{"@language":"ja-Kana","@value":"ジンルイ セイタイガク ワ フィールド チョウサ オ ドウ キロク スル カ"}]},{"@id":"https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1390001205218651648","@type":"Article","relationType":["isReferencedBy"],"jpcoar:relatedTitle":[{"@language":"en","@value":"THE ROLES OF WESTERN BIOMEDICINE AND FOLK MEDICINE IN RURAL SOLOMON ISLANDS: A QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF VILLAGERS' RESPONSE TO ILLNESS"}]}],"dataSourceIdentifier":[{"@type":"CROSSREF","@value":"10.1017/cbo9780511521072"},{"@type":"CROSSREF","@value":"10.1002/ajpa.22844_references_DOI_D25ex5XPC1ae2M1vUOHs0suqFlB"},{"@type":"CROSSREF","@value":"10.3861/jshhe.81.196_references_DOI_D25ex5XPC1ae2M1vUOHs0suqFlB"},{"@type":"CROSSREF","@value":"10.2149/tmh.34.83_references_DOI_D25ex5XPC1ae2M1vUOHs0suqFlB"}]}