These activities are particularly salient in Aotearoa/New Zealand where the past forty years have witnessed a growing emphasis on the importance of patient "self-responsibility" and where the state has invested heavily in health, even introducing a "wellbeing budget" that tracks the economy via wellbeing measures. All of these activities add up to a concept-and a worldview-that anthropologist Susanna Trnka conceptualizes as healthization. Through this framework, managing one's emotions, keeping one's sense of "balance," and tracking the number of miles run, swum, or bicycled, become overlapping, all-consuming activities, to the point of almost encompassing life itself. By analyzing ethnographic interviews with young people, Trnka reveals the emotional, financial, and deeply personal ideas at stake as understandings of health shift in the minds of young people. Often at the vanguard of new trends in mental health, physical fitness, and digital health technologies, the youth in Aotearoa/New Zealand enact what it means to be well in the twenty-first century.
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