Abstract
India has undergone a considerable epidemiological transition in the past few decades. The rise of cancer and other chronic illnesses has, and will continue to have, a substantial impact on the overall burden of disease, as well as the lived experiences of illness in India. Little is known about the cultural inflection of cancer in the Indian medical, historical and religious/spiritual landscape, which is both highly varied and rapidly changing. Here, we explore some of the issues emergent from individuals’ experiences of illness including their understandings of cancer, its ‘origins’, its meanings and subsequent everyday experiences. Drawing on interviews with 40 people with cancer in Hyderabad, we focus on the cultural ontologies of cancer in India, the social moralities and evolving individual responsibilisation around cancer, and some of the affective dimensions of these interpretations of illness.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the participants and the support of the Australian Research Council in funding this research.
Notes
1. For instance, advertisements titled ‘Mukesh’ and ‘Sponge’ were released in 2012 promoting the harms of tobacco use (http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2013-09-30/news/42537022).