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dc.contributor.authorRoy, Pinaki-
dc.date.accessioned2023-11-02T10:50:47Z-
dc.date.available2023-11-02T10:50:47Z-
dc.date.issued2023-03-31-
dc.identifier.issn2348-6538-
dc.identifier.urihttp://ir.nbu.ac.in/handle/123456789/5048-
dc.description.abstractAppadurai’s (1986) “social life of things” approach helps conceptualize human organs as not merely biological but deeply embedded in complex social relationships, and implicated in the associated hierarchies within which they acquire significance. Disputes in the interpersonal realm in immediate, everyday contexts of ailment, disease and its management foregrounds the encumbered ontology of bodies and organs – their entanglement in relational disputes articulated in and through the ailing body and failing organ. Drawing on unanticipated moments in the life-trajectory of the researcher – an essentially unconventional source of data in now canonized practices of sociological and anthropological research, this paper demonstrates that people who are ill or afflicted with some disease which requires personalized care and group attention, physical involvement and financial expenses, often become objects of dispute over issues of care, support and responsibility. Such discourses reaffirm the social – the responsibility of the family and friends or the wider kin group towards the ill, as much as they are discourses of contention over issues like who is ideally responsible for taking care of the ill and dependent? How the responsibility is to be shared or distributed within the family or amongst immediate kin members? And if the responsibility is not to be divided equally, what are the plausible grounds for waiving or discounting one over another? Engagement with unanticipated yet immediate situations of kidney failure and its familial management reveals that such disputes need not always seamlessly centre on the question of ownership of property of the ailing beyond death, but around the failing or afflicted organ itself, in that it serves as the material-symbolic locus of disputes which frames the human organ as encumbered property.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherUniversity of North Bengalen_US
dc.subjectSocial life,en_US
dc.subjectSocialityen_US
dc.subjectHuman bodyen_US
dc.subjectHuman organsen_US
dc.subjectEncumbranceen_US
dc.subjectOntologyen_US
dc.subjectDisputeen_US
dc.subjectPropertyen_US
dc.subjectKidney failureen_US
dc.subjectDialysisen_US
dc.titleEncumbered Ontology: An Intimate Foray into the Sociality of Human Organsen_US
dc.title.alternativeSOCIAL TRENDS Peer-reviewed National Journal of the Department of Sociology of North Bengal University, Vol.10, 31st March 2023, pp 17-33en_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
Appears in Collections:Vol.10 (March 2023)

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