- Overview
-
This book tells a personal and sociological account of a woman with a sick body in a society where good health is a must.
- Book Intro
-
The book tells the stories of a person with a sick body in a society where good health is a must. The author is a feminist, human rights activist, and a single person householder, and she was brimming with enough energy to prepare herself for triathlon sports. But after her trip to Palestine on a peace mission, she began suffering from an unexplainable dizziness, hemorrhage, and cancer. From then on, she chronicles her difficult and grueling struggle to come to terms with her sick self.
Even though we are all subject to minor and more serious illnesses, we view the hours of our sickness as a waste of time while struggling to overcome the condition. So then, do sick people have nothing to resort to but to get well? Do they have to give up a “holistic” life” until they regain good health? Such a limited opinion not only alienates sick people but also healthy ones as well.
This book confronts the “sick body” up front. It starts off with the author’s detailed evaluation of the changes that took place when her body fell ill and presents her sharp and penetrating insight into the biases and discriminatory problems revolving around illnesses. She also provides a concrete analysis of the social structure and medical system, thereby offering a new idea for change while challenging the very notion of “health” and what is “normal.” All in all, it is an exploration of how to be ill in a “preferably” way.
- About the Author
-
Jo Han Jin-hui
A feminist, she came across the movement for the physically challenged while questioning the status quo and as a postcolonial feminist, she became involved in the Palestine Movement. She values intersectionality and advocates region- and form-free activism. Beginning at Womenlink, a feminist group, she worked full-time at different social organizations; since she became ill, she participated as a non-standing commissioner. Her health deteriorated after her active participation in Palestine in 2009 and for the last decade she has been sick and well, with her career being interrupted. After her first struggle with her illness, she worked for several years on the Korea Broadcasting Company radio program as a guest worker, introducing books and film on human rights, and making a minimal wage to get by. When she became accustomed to her ailing body, she wrote columns for a feminist journal, Ilda and a monthly news magazine, Wocus, using banda as her pseudonym. Before she fell ill, she had directed a number of documentary films, for example I am a physically challenged person for RTV and co-wrote the book Ratik, Palestine, and Me with her co-workers at the Palestine Peace Coalition.
- Recommendation
- Selection