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The Spirit Catches You And You Fall Down By Anne Fadiman

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In Anne Fadiman’s book, The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, Lia Lee, a Hmong child refugee with severe epilepsy, and her life are caught in the middle of a substantial cultural misunderstanding. Although Lie and her family live in the United States and go to an American hospital, her family believes in Shamanism, thus her family believes that Lee’s epilepsy is sacred. The miscommunications which ensue, both culturally and linguistically, between Neil Ernst and Peggy Philp, Lia’s doctors, and the Lee family cause Lia Lee, before she even turns five years old, to end up in comatose for the rest of her life. However, Lia Lee’s life could have been saved if the Lee’s had a better understanding of the American doctors’ intentions, and the …show more content…

As provided by Fadiman, there are many instances where Hmong people and American doctors disagree and have a breakdown in communication. Rather than trying to bridge the gap between the two cultures, American doctors stubbornly kept trying to impose their way of healing Lia on the Lees, and the Lees refused to completely subject themselves to the will of the doctors. Moreover, the Hmong and American cultures are quite different, so bridging the gap would have been time-consuming, but at the sametime fruitful. In chapter four, Fadiman explains how in the refugee camps in South East Asia, Dwight Conquergood, a camp volunteer who was interested in shamanism, managed to blend Western medicine with Hmong traditions to create a more hygienic environment. Fadiman explains, “Conquergood’s first challenge came after an outbreak of rabies among the camp dogs prompted a mass dog-vaccination campaign by the medical staff, during which the Ban Vinai inhabitants failed to bring in a single dog to be inoculated” (49). The original challenge which the staff at Ban Vinai struggled with is similar to the struggle which Neil Ernst and Peggy Philip struggle with, a lack of communication and understanding between the Hmong and American medical culture. However, unlike Ernst and Phillip who try to impose the western medicine on the Lees, Conquergood comes up with a working alternative, “he decided on a Rabies Parade, a procession led by three important characters from Hmong folktales-- a tiger, a chicken, and a dab-- dressed in homemade costumes. The cast, like its audience, was one hundred percent Hmong” (49). Through the parade, “the chicken explained the etiology of the rabies through a bullhorn. The next morning, the vaccination stations were so besieged by dogs” (50). Essentially, Conquergood came up with a way to bridge these vastly different cultures, he simply had a

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