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Accepted Paper
Paper short abstract
Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in South India, I explore how coastal transformations map onto physiological and psychological states in vulnerable communities and address these entangled ecological and psycho-physiological coastal erosions as wounds invoked by the local term, coastal dosham
Paper long abstract
Chellanam is among the areas of Kerala, South India that are most severely affected by coastal erosion and flooding. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Chellanam, I trace lived experiences of coastal erosion. I explore how coastal transformations map onto physiological and psychological states in one of Kerala’s most vulnerable communities and address these entangled ecological and psycho-physiological coastal erosions as wounds invoked by the local term, coastal dosham. An Ayurvedic and local imagination of shared trauma, this helps to carve out what it means to think with flows, blockages and imbalances about the multiple interlocking relations of people, minds, bodies and ecologies under conditions of coastal erosion. In doing so, I contribute to the anthropology of coastal erosion and the anthropology of ecological distress.
Bodies and health in a changing climate
Session 2