1. The case of the Guru Nanak Emergency Services Department: Sikh therapeutic geographies.
- Author
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Macdonald, Arlene
- Subjects
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IMMIGRANTS , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *MINORITIES , *POPULATION geography , *QUALITATIVE research , *SIKHS , *METROPOLITAN areas , *RELIGION , *SPIRITUAL care (Medical care) - Abstract
Why, in the early 21st century, has a publicly funded, publicly operated Canadian hospital incorporated the founding figure of the Sikh religion into its architecture and its identity? Drawing on qualitative research, this paper argues that the Guru Nanak Emergency Department is not an extension of the old tradition of naming hospitals after religious figures, but rather a novel development arising from the "super-diversity" of contemporary cities, the "spiritualizing" of healthcare ecologies, and the vigorous actions of Sikhs attempting to remedy social wounds and build 'healthy spaces' in the pluralistic urban environs they are part of. A new therapeutic geography is emergent; the Guru Nanak Emergency Department signals new trajectories of care propagated by the lively interrelations of spiritualized healthcare ecologies, precarious and mobile religious minorities, and the city that houses them both. • Case study of a controversial naming of a hospital emergency department after Guru Nanak. • Adds to understanding of Sikh diaspora in Canadian context. • Locates this emergency department in a shifting "therapeutic geography". • Highlights implications of emergency department as a shifting "therapeutic geography". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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