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The cultural production of Bioterapia: Psychic healing and the natural medicine movement in Slovakia

Author

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  • Rubens, Donna
  • Gyurkovics, Darina
  • Hornacek, Karol

Abstract

Despite powerful opposition, natural medicine (NM) has achieved a toe-hold in the state-run biomedical system in the Slovak Republic. The physician-leader of the NM movement hopes to leverage his ministerial post as NM 'supreme expert' and his interlocking NM clinical and research facilities to achieve a complex, unified health care system under control of medical doctors. This health care model simultaneously reinforces biomedical hegemony and decenters classical medicine by substituting a bioenergetical paradigm. NM includes, among other diagnostic and healing modalities, acupuncture, herbal therapies, bee therapy, reflexology, iridology. However, its paradigmatic form is bioterapia, the focus of this paper. Bioterapia is a form of psychic healing or therapeutic touch. According to its practitioners, it is based on bioenergetic and information-processing principles. Conceptually, bioterapia unifies psyche, soma and energy dimensions of the human body and situates the human organism in an extended transpersonal social, physical and cosmological environment. Bioterapia is a scientized and medicalized reconstruction of a folk healing tradition whose appropriation simultaneously secularized and re-sacralized this tradition by re-locating its practice from lay healers to medical doctors, from the religious domain to the venerated scientific domain, from deviant science to normal science. The reconfiguration into bioterapia as part of the creation of an academic secular parapsychology in the former Soviet Bloc in the late 1960s, illustrates the use of the privileged discourse of science for a cultural production that seems to have both supported and subverted the regime.

Suggested Citation

  • Rubens, Donna & Gyurkovics, Darina & Hornacek, Karol, 1995. "The cultural production of Bioterapia: Psychic healing and the natural medicine movement in Slovakia," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 41(9), pages 1261-1271, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:41:y:1995:i:9:p:1261-1271
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