Balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult Yup'ik women

Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2014. Ten years ago CANHR (Center for Alaska Native Health Research) asked Yup'ik men and women of all ages how they would define health and wellness; that is, what it means to be well and happy. The answers were largely centered on living a subsist...

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Main Author: Ebsen, Cecilie R.
Other Authors: Plattet, Patrick, Schweitzer, Peter, Rasmus, Stacey
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4697
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/4697 2023-05-15T18:46:00+02:00 Balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult Yup'ik women Ebsen, Cecilie R. Plattet, Patrick Schweitzer, Peter Rasmus, Stacey 2014-08 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4697 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4697 Department of Anthropology Thesis ma 2014 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:36:16Z Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2014. Ten years ago CANHR (Center for Alaska Native Health Research) asked Yup'ik men and women of all ages how they would define health and wellness; that is, what it means to be well and happy. The answers were largely centered on living a subsistence lifestyle, eating subsistence foods and respecting natural spirits and lands. Today a new generation of young Yup'ik women has emerged. A generation that has grown up in villages and cities with storebought food available next to subsistence food, TV, and Internet. In this study young adult Yup'ik women's perceptions of health and their use of dancing as a practice of health are investigated. This study looks at how this new generation of young adult Yup'ik women understand health. Young adult Yup'ik women's perceptions and practices of health, such as dancing, are examined to determine what these women consider important to stay healthy and how the notion of health itself can be understood. Ideas of what it means to the subjects comprising the study population to be healthy are crucial to understand before conducting any kind of health research. How people interpret, navigate and understand the very notion of health must be uncovered in order to work with them on any and all health issues. As such the notion of health cannot and should not be conceptionalized as the mere presence or absence of disease but includes instead a wide network of social, spiritual, physical, mental, and emotional factors. Consequently, this study approaches health from a holistic perspective implementing a wide network of factors in the investigation of young, adult, Yup'ik women's perceptions and practices of health. Chapter 1. Introduction -- 1.1. Motivation for and significance of studying Yup'ik women's health -- 1.2. Epistemological considerations -- 1.3. Defining central research terms -- 1.3.1. Young adult -- 1.3.2. Yup'ik -- 1.3.3. Women -- 1.3.4. Research Partners -- 1.3.5. Health -- 1.3.6. Traditional/contemporary ... Thesis Yup'ik Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Fairbanks
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description Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2014. Ten years ago CANHR (Center for Alaska Native Health Research) asked Yup'ik men and women of all ages how they would define health and wellness; that is, what it means to be well and happy. The answers were largely centered on living a subsistence lifestyle, eating subsistence foods and respecting natural spirits and lands. Today a new generation of young Yup'ik women has emerged. A generation that has grown up in villages and cities with storebought food available next to subsistence food, TV, and Internet. In this study young adult Yup'ik women's perceptions of health and their use of dancing as a practice of health are investigated. This study looks at how this new generation of young adult Yup'ik women understand health. Young adult Yup'ik women's perceptions and practices of health, such as dancing, are examined to determine what these women consider important to stay healthy and how the notion of health itself can be understood. Ideas of what it means to the subjects comprising the study population to be healthy are crucial to understand before conducting any kind of health research. How people interpret, navigate and understand the very notion of health must be uncovered in order to work with them on any and all health issues. As such the notion of health cannot and should not be conceptionalized as the mere presence or absence of disease but includes instead a wide network of social, spiritual, physical, mental, and emotional factors. Consequently, this study approaches health from a holistic perspective implementing a wide network of factors in the investigation of young, adult, Yup'ik women's perceptions and practices of health. Chapter 1. Introduction -- 1.1. Motivation for and significance of studying Yup'ik women's health -- 1.2. Epistemological considerations -- 1.3. Defining central research terms -- 1.3.1. Young adult -- 1.3.2. Yup'ik -- 1.3.3. Women -- 1.3.4. Research Partners -- 1.3.5. Health -- 1.3.6. Traditional/contemporary ...
author2 Plattet, Patrick
Schweitzer, Peter
Rasmus, Stacey
format Thesis
author Ebsen, Cecilie R.
spellingShingle Ebsen, Cecilie R.
Balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult Yup'ik women
author_facet Ebsen, Cecilie R.
author_sort Ebsen, Cecilie R.
title Balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult Yup'ik women
title_short Balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult Yup'ik women
title_full Balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult Yup'ik women
title_fullStr Balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult Yup'ik women
title_full_unstemmed Balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult Yup'ik women
title_sort balancing life: perceptions and practices of health among young adult yup'ik women
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4697
geographic Fairbanks
geographic_facet Fairbanks
genre Yup'ik
Alaska
genre_facet Yup'ik
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4697
Department of Anthropology
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