91Âț». Dong Isbister, associate professor of womenâs and gender studies at the University of Wisconsin-Platteville, and two co-authors recently wrote a chapter in the book âChinese Environmental Humanities: Practices of Environing at the Margins,â published by Palgrave Macmillan in August.
In the chapter âBlurred Centers/Margins: Ethnobotanical Healing in Writings by Ethnic Minority Women in China,â Isbister and the two co-authors focus on writings by ethnic minority women in China â with special attention to the connection between healing and the vegetal world in the changing social and natural environments in post-socialist China.
The co-authors examine âHerbs Living in the Bodyâ (2012) by the Tujia writer Chen Danling and âSnow Lotusâ (2012) by the Hui writer Mao Mei to articulate how ethnobotanical healing addresses questions of margins and centers in post-socialist China. They explore the ethnobotanical in the distinct ways that it blurs the concept of margins and centers in geopolitical terms and argue that the ethnobotanical serves as a source of connection among the environmental, corporeal and spiritual, and is central to processes of physical or spiritual healing.
âPeople in various cultures make connections between healing and the vegetal world,â said Isbister. âNature abounds in plants that treat or cure ailments or diseases, as in the case of roses being used to alleviate menstrual cramps among the Tujia people in China. Simple practices like this, in theory, help humans consider human-nonhuman relationships in a nonhierarchical manner, because the vegetal world unquestionably helps sustain human life.â
Isbister noted that faculty scholarship contributes to the quality of student learning and has positive impacts on student research. âIt also demonstrates faculty membersâ commitment to instructional and institutional goals and missions beyond the classroom,â she said.
Her scholarship will inform her curriculum development and teaching too. âThis collaborative research and writing project will be particularly relevant to curriculum and program changes on campus,â she said. âFor example, my scholarship in environmental studies and humanities in recent years will be useful for the new environmental science major and courses with an interest in human-nonhuman relationships. Another example is the new book chapter will be taught at Brooklyn College-City University of New York in spring 2020.â
Chapter co-authors include Isbister; 91Âț». Xiumei Pu, assistant professor of environmental studies at Westminster College in Salt Lake City, Utah; and 91Âț». Stephen Rachman, associate professor of English at Michigan State University in Lansing. The book was edited by 91Âț». Chia-ju Chang, professor of Chinese at Brooklyn College-City University of New York.
âCollaborators bring their strengths and expertise to a project for which they have shared passion, enlighten one another and contribute to interdisciplinary research collectively,â said Isbister.