The sociocultural factors related to immigrant health perceptions and practices have been long flattened and essentialized in discussions of urban community health, leading to programs and policies that fall short in holistically addressing community needs. Responding to this shortfall, in this article, I take a phenomenological approach to understanding the relationships between ecological heritage practices and health in Latin American and Caribbean immigrant communities in New York City. Through ethnographic accounts of heritage practices, I identify broad themes related to everyday practice: health care pluralism, space and time constraints, social identity, and biological health. Foodways and the preparation of traditional dishes featured prominently in the 20 semi-structured interviews and participant observation across four diverse neighborhoods. I use the embodied ecological heritage (EEH) framework to theorize the connections between the practice of heritage traditions and the well body. I illustrate how everyday negotiations around how practices are defined and described as “normal” in the context of the new environments of the immigrant experience, so capturing the fluidity of the heritage practices and the traditional body as a site of wellness. Focus on this fluidity of heritage practice stands to improve the ways in which immigrant community health resources might be developed and deployed, providing a holistic lens often lacking in urban public health systems.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Winter 2023
Research Article|
November 17 2023
EMBODYING THE EVERYDAY: HEALTH AND HERITAGE PRACTICE RELATIONSHIPS IN LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN IMMIGRANT COMMUNITIES IN NEW YORK CITY
Kristina Baines
Kristina Baines
Kristina Baines is a sociocultural anthropologist with an applied medical/environmental focus. Her research interests include Indigenous ecologies, health, and heritage in the context of global change, in addition to publicly engaged research and dissemination practices. She is Associate Professor of Anthropology at CUNY, Guttman, Affiliated Faculty at the CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, and Co-director at Cool Anthropology.
Search for other works by this author on:
Human Organization (2023) 82 (4): 331–341.
Citation
Kristina Baines; EMBODYING THE EVERYDAY: HEALTH AND HERITAGE PRACTICE RELATIONSHIPS IN LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN IMMIGRANT COMMUNITIES IN NEW YORK CITY. Human Organization 1 December 2023; 82 (4): 331–341. doi: https://doi.org/10.17730/1938-3525-82.4.331
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Could not validate captcha. Please try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your InstitutionCiting articles via
MPAs AS PROTECTED DESTINATIONS: RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN OUTDOOR RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES, INCLUDING FISHING, AND PERCEPTIONS OF MARINE RESERVES IN PUGET SOUND, WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES
Marc L. Miller, Richard B. Pollnac, Patrick J. Christie
RESPONSIBLE DRIVING IN THE AGE OF SMARTPHONES: APPLIED RESEARCH FOR IMPROVING ROAD SAFETY IN THE MOTOR CITY
Yuson Jung, Andrea Sankar, Kaitlin Carter, Yen-Ting Chang, Bianca Dean, Travis Kruso, Colleen Linn, Emily Lock, Craig Meiners, Molly Sanford, Haley Scott, Jasmine Walker
EDITORIAL: KEEPING PACE
Lenore Manderson