000 02019cam a2200277 4500500
005 20250112051416.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aTantchou, Josiane
_eauthor
700 1 0 _a Grunénais, Marc-Éric
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aBlurring Boundaries
260 _c2010.
500 _a66
520 _aAnthropological research on surgical practice is rare. Joan Cassel (1986, 1987) studied the surgeon’s personality in relation with the specificities of surgery as a specialty. Marie-Christine Pouchelle (2003) analyzed the “touch” in the hospital, with a special emphasis on its surgical aspects. Pearl Katz (1981) proposed a typology of the operating theater according to the criteria of sterile and non sterile. Hirschauer (1991) analyzed the process of surgery as an encounter of two disciplined bodies: the patient’s body and the surgeon’s body. We follow Katz (1981) analysis and propose a reflection on how, in the context of a health system crisis, the operating theater and its equipment are appropriated. We show that, in this context, restrictions that make the operating theater a confined space are blown apart, the boundaries of the sterile and non sterile vanish, the surgical practice is stripped of its thickness, and the surgical area is trivialized. Far from proposing a final analysis, this article refocuses the debate on the African health systems failures by approaching the surgical theater as part of a technological system, the hospital, which can be appropriated in various ways depending on the socioeconomic context.
690 _ahospital
690 _amedicine
690 _aAfrica
690 _asurgery
690 _aboundaries
690 _atechnological system
690 _ahealth anthropology
690 _asterile
690 _aCameroun
786 0 _nRevue d'anthropologie des connaissances | 3o 3 | 3 | 2010-03-15 | p. 458-484
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-anthropologie-des-connaissances-2009-3-page-458?lang=en
999 _c202326
_d202326