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Ten years is a long time, a decade during which I have benefited from many acts of generosity, care, and support.
The time has also been marked by loss. To my stepfather, Tom Dooley, I am so sorry that I cannot share this book with you. I wish you could have seen how much of you is in it.
This book began at Harvard University where the Department of Anthropology, the Hemenway Fellowship of American Ethnology, the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, and the Saltonstall Population Studies Center provided generous financial support. The Department of Anthropology and the Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University provided write-up funding and new intellectual connections.
Without my advisors and mentors—Arthur Kleinman, Joanne Rappaport, and Kay Warren—this project never would have materialized. Thank you for the years of continued support; I never realized that advising was such a long-term commitment. I am grateful to Arthur Kleinman for taking me on as an advisee post-fieldwork and then turning me into a medical anthropologist. His engagement with my work and sharp critical reading have made this book possible. Joanne Rappaport started me on this path. Being a student in her classes made me want to be an anthropologist. Kay Warren provided crucial support at key moments in this project and was always convinced that there was an interesting project here, even when I wasn’t.
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