Rethinking Diabetes
Entanglements With Trauma, Poverty, and HIV
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.32473/nfja.4.1.130952Keywords:
Diabetes, Narratives, Trauma, SyndemicsAbstract
This review explores Emily Mendenhall's book, "Rethinking Diabetes: Entanglements With Trauma, Poverty, and HIV" which cross-culturally examines diabetes. Mendenhall's use of case study narratives to flesh-out her use of syndemic theory in the exploration of dibetes enactments and understandings is the strength of this text.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Elisha Oliver
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
By submitting to the New Florida Journal of Anthropology, the author(s) agree to the terms of the Author Agreement. All authors retain copyrights associated with their article contributions and agree to make such contributions available under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license upon publication.
Florida OJ Author Agreement (University of Florida)
The following agreement takes effect upon acceptance of the Submission (“Submission”) for publication in the New Florida Journal of Anthropology:
I hereby grant to the University of Florida (“the University”) the non-exclusive right to retain, reproduce and distribute the Submission in whole or in part, in print and electronic format and in any medium. This agreement does not represent a transfer of copyright to the University.
The University may make and keep multiple copies of the work for purposes of security, backup, preservation and access; and may migrate the work to any medium or format for the purpose of preservation and access.
I represent and warrant to the University that the work is my original work and that I have the authority as sole author or I have the authority on behalf of my co-authors to grant the rights contained in this agreement. I also represent that the work does not, to the best of my knowledge, infringe or violate any rights of others.
I further represent and warrant that I have obtained all necessary rights to permit the University to reproduce and distribute the work, including any third-party material. Alternatively, I represent that my use of any third-party material is allowed because the material is not in copyright or I have performed a fair use analysis and reasonably believe my use is permitted. Any content owned by a third party is clearly identified and acknowledged within the work.
I grant these same rights to New Florida Journal of Anthropology. Additionally, I grant the right to both the University and New Florida Journal of Anthropology to enter into agreements with third-party entities and the rights necessary to host, print, index and abstract the Submission.
Open Access and Self-Archiving
The New Florida Journal of Anthropology follows an open-access publishing model, meaning that all articles will be publicly accessible on the Internet immediately upon publication.Authors may share the submitted manuscript (preprint) of the Submission on the Internet at any point before or after publication, with a citation and link to the final version of record to be added as soon as the issue is available. The author may disseminate the final peer-reviewed version at any point after publication.
Creative Commons License
The New Florida Journal of Anthropology applies a Creative Commons CC BY-NC 4.0 license to encourage sharing and reuse of content and to maximize the impact of published research. By publishing in the New Florida Journal of Anthropology, authors agree that the terms of this license will be applied to the Submission. The George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida (copyright@uflib.ufl.edu) may be able to offer additional information.
By granting this license, authors acknowledge that they have read and agreed to the terms of this agreement.