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About The Book
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Healing Insanity: A Study of Igbo Medicine in Contemporary Nigeria is an original and in-depth study on endogenous medical system in an African society. It is craftily written and provides solid insight through case studies and theory into how insanity affects patients and the society. Particularly it explores various collective representations and strategies regarding insanity and healing as it examines the healing institutions healers and ritual cults. The central question is given the patterns of healing how do the Igbo shape the incidence and symptoms of insanity define its aetiology and provide healers with culture-specific resources and skills to address this illness? The focus became increasingly centred on bodily semantics and endogenous knowledge systems and practices. Dr. Patrick Iroegbus work is a very valuable and rare study and has appeared at a desirable time. It is for an African society a comprehensive study of the many ways Igbo people in their practical routinelike attitudes and body-centred experiences as well as in their more reflective aetiologic knowledge and healing institutions relate to the phenomenon of insanity or ara in the cultural parlance. As the first of its kind reminiscent of and assured by the various remarks of Igbo scholars and leaders at various meetings and discourses the task this work has set out to accomplish is a very brave one. The authors account of his fieldwork experiences and adopted techniques illustrates his initiation revealing him as a genuine ethnographer who is a friend of people and at ease with his field. With both the far-seeing and inspiring analysis of Igbo medicine life and culture accounted for in the work the book stands out for ethnographers teachers students leaders policymakers and the general public. This is a book that deserves to be read as it shapes the critical path toward understanding ways of healing insanity in a culture-specific context crosscutting perspectives for a relationship between indigenous healing and the biomedical sphere. Prof. Ren Devisch (Africa Research Centre University of Leuven) This book is written with a clear purpose for everyone to readto understand and heal insanityand indeed provides a thick piece of cultural philosophy and vernacular of Igbo medicine in hopes of putting cultural wisdom in pursuit of integral health care development. Prof. Pantaleon Iroegbu (Professor of Philosophy Major-Seminary Ekpoma January 2006) To read this book as I did is to get the benefit of Dr. Patrick Iroegbus ethnographic insight for an archetypical African healing system in Igboland. It offers a fascinating theory of symbolic release that speaks of African symbolic action and knowledge system. Dr. Paul Komba Esq. (University of Cambridge)