Embodied Belonging: In/exclusion, Health Care, and Well-Being in a World in Motion

Cult Med Psychiatry. 2021 Mar;45(1):2-21. doi: 10.1007/s11013-020-09693-3.

Abstract

In this introduction, we propose the notion of 'embodied belonging' as a fruitful analytical heuristic for scholars in medical and psychological anthropology. We envision this notion to help us gain a more nuanced understanding of the entanglements of the political, social, and affective dimensions of belonging and their effects on health, illness, and healing. A focus on embodied belonging, we argue, reveals how displacement, exclusion, and marginalization cause existential and health-related ruptures in people's lives and bodies, and how affected people, in the struggle for re/emplacement and re/integration, may regain health and sustain their well-being. Covering a variety of regional contexts (Germany/Vietnam, Norway, the UK, Japan), the contributions to this special issue examine how embodied non/belonging is experienced, re/imagined, negotiated, practiced, disrupted, contested, and achieved (or not) by their protagonists, who are excluded and marginalized in diverse ways. Each article highlights the intricate trajectories of how dynamics of non/belonging inscribe themselves in human bodies. They also reveal how belonging can be utilized and drawn on as a forceful means and resource of social resilience, if not (self-)therapy and healing.

Keywords: Belonging; Embodiment; Exclusion; Marginalization; Well-being.

Publication types

  • Editorial

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Psychological*
  • Anthropology, Cultural
  • Asian People / ethnology
  • Europe
  • Health Services Accessibility*
  • Humans
  • Interpersonal Relations*
  • Japan
  • Quality of Life
  • Social Conditions*
  • Transients and Migrants / psychology*