• Title of article

    Vital warmth and well-being: steambathing as household therapy among the Tzeltal and Tzotzil Maya of highland Chiapas, Mexico

  • Author/Authors

    Kevin P. Groark، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    785
  • To page
    795
  • Abstract
    Among the Maya, the cultural history of steambathing spans more than two millennia. Although it has largely disappeared from the lowlands, household-level steambathing persists in several highland Maya communities in Chiapas, Mexico. In this article, I present an overview of therapeutic steambathing among the Tzeltal and Tzotzil Maya. Through an extended discussion of the beliefs and practices surrounding steambathing, I develop several features of highland Maya thinking about physical health and “well-being”. In particular, I examine a set of ethnophysiological representations relating to the “thermal” nature of functional bodies, and the relationship of these models to the maintenance and restoration of health. The highland Maya have articulated an elaborate understanding of physical health and well-being coded in an idiom of “vital warmth”, and directed toward the preservation and augmentation of the endogenous heat necessary for vitality and vigor. These models simultaneously reflect empirical understandings of bodily states in health and illness, as well as metaphorical assumptions about the thermal nature of functional psychosocial identities. Steambathing draws on and reinforces these models, constituting a core cultural technology for radically altering the thermal state of the patient, an experience which the highland Maya regard as deeply beneficial. The paper closes with a discussion of recent biomedical research into the physiological effects of hyperthermal therapies.
  • Keywords
    Steambath , Humoral theory , ethnomedicine , Highland Maya , Tzeltal , Sweatbath , Tzotzil , Mexico , Chiapas
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    602456