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University of California Press

About the Book

From the opening sequence, in which mid-nineteenth-century Indian fishermen hear the possibility of redemption in an old woman's madness, No Aging in India captures the reader with its interplay of story and analysis. Drawing on more than a decade of ethnographic work, Lawrence Cohen links a detailed investigation of mind and body in old age in four neighborhoods of the Indian city of Varanasi (Banaras) with events and processes around India and around the world. This compelling exploration of senility—encompassing not only the aging body but also larger cultural anxieties—combines insights from medical anthropology, psychoanalysis, and postcolonial studies. Bridging literary genres as well as geographic spaces, Cohen responds to what he sees as the impoverishment of both North American and Indian gerontologies—the one mired in ambivalence toward demented old bodies, the other insistent on a dubious morality tale of modern families breaking up and abandoning their elderly. He shifts our attention irresistibly toward how old age comes to matter in the constitution of societies and their narratives of identity and history.

About the Author

Lawrence Cohen is Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Program in Critical Studies of Medicine, Science, and the Body at the University of California, Berkeley.

Table of Contents

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
THE GROUND OF THE ARGUMENT 
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 
NOTE ON TRANSCRIPTION, TRANSLATION, AND TRANSLITERATION

INTRODUCTION 
The Mad Old Woman of the Millennium 
The Age of Alzheimer's 
The View from the River 

Dulari 
1. ORIENTATIONS 
The ,Zagreb Tamasha 
Whats Wrong with This Picture? 
The Better Brain 
Tropical Softening 
Embodying Probate 
A Medical Explanation 
The Senile Body 
An Anthropological Picaresque 
Of Varanasi

World Wide Web 
2. ALZHEIMER'S HELL
No Aging in America! Leading Scientists Reveal 
Alzheimer's Subjectivity, and the the Old West 
The Geriatric Paradox 
Oublier Postmodern Aging 
A Witch's Curse 
The Senile Climacteric 
Alzheimer's Family 

Nuns and Doctors 
3. KNOWLEDGE, PRACTICE, AND THE BAD FAMILY 
On Gerontological Objects 
The 'Aging in India" Series 
Internationalist Science 
The "Golden Isles" 
Gerontology as Cultural Critique 
BP Checks:The Volunteer Agency 
Free Radical Exchange:The Geriatric Clinic 
Into the Woods:The Retirement Ashram 
Mothers versus Aunties: The Old Age Home 

Aitasaa Pralapa 
MEMORY BANKS 
The Embodiment of Anxiety 
The Promise of Rasayana 
The Marketing of Memory 
Memory and Capital 
Forgetting as a Path to Truth 

Meri Lata Mahan 
THE ANGER OF THE RISHIS
Hot Brains 
Sixtyishness and Seventy-twoness 
Oedipus in India 
Counting the Days and Hours
Old Women at the Polls 
The Phenomenology of the Voice 
The Familial Body 
The Dying Space 
Taking Voices Seriously 

The Philosophers Mother 
6. THE MALADJUSTMENT OF THE BOURGEOISIE 
Civility and Contest 
Balance and Adjustment 
Senility and Madness 
Loneliness and Menopause 
Balance and Cartesian Possibility 
The Dementia Clinic 

The Way to the Indies, to the Fountain of Jouth 
7. CHAPATI BODIES 
Nagwa by Its Residents 
Weakness as Structure 
Muslims and Other Saints 
Generation and Weakness Revisited 
Jhandu and the Sound of Dying
The Position of Repose 

A Child Is Being Lifted 
8. DOG LADIES AND THE BERIYA BABA 
Dogs and Old Women 
Old Women and Madwomen 
Madwomen and Witches 
Dogs and Old Men 
Old Men and Babas 
Babas and the State 

The Age of the Anthropologist 
9. THE BODY IN TIME 
My Grandmother's Letters
No One Here Cares about Alzheimer's 
Lost at the Fair 

A Last Few Trips up the River 

NOTES 
GLOSSARY 
REFERENCES 
INDEX 

Reviews

"This is a powerful, provocative book, rich with meaning. Lawrence Cohen weaves together challenging, revealing theory with vivid ethnographic images—of white-clad stooped women mingling with hungry dogs on the narrow lanes of Varanasi (Benaras); of a 'hot-minded' mother-in-law yelling out her window for someone to come save her, thus inculpating a 'Bad Family' and uncaring daughter-in- law; of an eager anthropologist trying to find senile old people with whom to do research. By the end the reader gains a new awareness of an important dimension of social and political life in India, as well as of what medical anthropology, gerontology, and ethnographic writing can be."
Anthropological Quarterly
"In studying 'what is not there' in India—aging as a disease—Cohen provides a richly documented view of what is there, especially of how people talk about things like Westernization and nuclear families as 'bad things.' No Aging in India packs in many details but also offers valuable comparative generalizations (with caution) that defy pure Geertzian guidelines about the sanctity of the local. . . . Monitoring the impacts of globalization and localization of Western views of aging, including gerontology, is another key area of future research prompted by this important book."
Pacific Affairs
"No Aging in India challenge[s] the ways in which we think about aging and senility, kinship and its undoing, medicine and the nation, language and the possibilities of ethnographic writing, and what it means to do the anthropology of South Asia. . . . [It] has helped to forge new openings and connections . . . in broader fields like anthropology, science and technology studies, South Asian Studies and critical gerontology." 
Somatosphere
"Beautifully written, erudite, a perfect balance between theory and ethnography. The narratives are wonderful."—E. Valentine Daniel, author of Charred Lullabies

"No book in medical anthropology matches No Aging in India in its extraordinary richness of ethnographic detail. A feast of stories, lives, and theory--it contains such a thickness of social experience that the reader feels he or she has become a part of India's local worlds. Lawrence Cohen has written one of the finest ethnographic monographs I have read. A triumph of field research and writing, this book will, I feel sure, set the standard for the next wave of ethnographies in medical anthropology."—Arthur Kleinman, author of Writing at the Margin

Awards

  • 1999 American Ethnological Society Prize for best first book 1999, American Ethnological Society
  • 2003 J. I. Staley Prize 2003, School of American Research