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      Plastic paradise: transforming bodies and selves in Costa Rica's cosmetic surgery tourism industry.

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      Medical anthropology
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          Long popular as a nature tourism destination, Costa Rica has recently emerged as a haven for middle class North Americans seeking inexpensive, state-of-the-art cosmetic surgery. This paper examines "cosmetic surgery tourism" in Costa Rica as a form of medicalized leisure, situated in elite private spaces and yet inextricably linked to a beleaguered national medical program. Through historical context and ethnographic analysis of activities at medical hotels and clinics, I describe how the recovery industry operates on the embodied subjectivities of visiting patients and their local caretakers. Recovery sociality and healing landscapes facilitate patients' transition through a period of post-surgical liminality and provide nostalgic transport to an imagined medical arcadia, while clinicians are attracted by a neoliberal promise of prosperity and autonomy. Ultimately, Costa Rica's transformation into a paradise of medical consumption and self-optimization is contingent on a mythology that obscures growing uncertainties and inequities in the nation's broader medical landscape.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Med Anthropol
          Medical anthropology
          Informa UK Limited
          1545-5882
          0145-9740
          Oct 2010
          : 29
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC, USA. saralouiseackerman@gmail.com
          Article
          929459415
          10.1080/01459740.2010.501316
          21082485
          536f591c-4271-48bb-ad46-049c0e6c9c41
          History

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