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Eat, Pray, Heal? — Prescribing Macrobiotic Foods in a Vietnamese Temple

Le Hoang Ngoc Yen

2024Japan focus15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This article draws on fieldwork among patients pursuing healing using macrobiotic diets at a Buddhist temple clinic not far from Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. It examines the (re-)emergence of macrobiotic diets as a movement for “nurturing life” (duõng sinh) in modeern Vietnam. By examining the use of macrobiotic diets among this temple's patients and followers, the article unravels popular discourses of food and health, and their intertwining relationships with conceptions of chronic diseases in contemporary Vietnamese society. The popularity of this temple as an alternative therapeutic centre for people with chronic conditions also sheds light on notions of illness, healing processes, and religious beliefs. The rise of macrobiotics as an alternative diet and lifestyle reveals people's uncertainties and mistrust amid many prevalent problems in contemporary Vietnam, such as food safety concerns. Altogether, “nurturing life” activities offer strategies for individuals to adapt to a rapidly changing social context.

Topics & Concepts

VietnameseTempleTraditional medicineMedicineAncient historyHistoryPhilosophyLinguisticsCulinary Culture and Tourism
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