BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

 

Resources Cited: 

 

 

Anaya, Rudolfo A. Bless Me, Ultima. Grand Central Pub., 1972.

 

Coronado, Gabriela. "Competing Health Models in Mexico: An Ideological Dialogue between            Indian and Hegemonic Views." Anthropology & Medicine12.2 (2005): 165-77. Web.

 

Handler, Richard, and Jocelyn Linnekin. "Tradition, Genuine or Spurious." The Journal of                  American Folklore 97.385 (1984): 273-90. Web.

 

Hendrickson, Brett. "Restoring the People: Reclaiming Indigenous Spirituality in Contemporary          Curanderismo." Spiritus: A Journal of Christian Spirituality 14.1 (2014): 76-83. Web.

 

Hoogasian, Rachel, and Ruth Lijtmaer. "Integrating Curanderismo into Counselling and                      Psychotherapy."  Counselling Pychology Quarterly 23.3 (2010): 297-307. Web.

 

Macko, Haley. “Evil Eye in the Mexican and Central American Culture.” ANP 204: Introduction        to Medical Anthropology (Summer 2014), 15 July 2014, anthropology.msu.edu/anp204-                  us14/2014/07/14/evil-eye-in-the-mexican-and-central-american-culture/.

 

Pabón, Melissa. "The Representation of Curanderismo in Selected Mexican American Works."        Journal of Hispanic Higher Education 6.3 (2007): 257-71. Web.

 

Salazar, Cindy Lynn, and Jeff Levin. "Religious Features of Curanderismo Training and Practice."    Explore (New York, N.Y.) 9.3 (2013): 150-158. Web.

 

Sims, Martha C., and Martine Stephens. Living Folklore: an Introduction to the Study of People        and Their Traditions. Utah State University Press, 2011.

 

Torres, Eliseo. Green Medicine: Traditional Mexican-American Herbal Remedies (1983). Web.