

The two cultures
1. Do you feel the author was evenhanded in her presentation
of Hmong culture and medical culture?
2. The book contains many Hmong phrases and many medical
phrases, both unfamiliar to most readers. Why do you think the author included
them?
3. Over the centuries, the Hmong fought against many
different peoples who claimed sovereignty over their lands. What role has this
tumultuous history played in the formation of Hmong culture?
4. How does the Hmong folktale about how Shee Yee
fought with nine evil dab brothers, told at the end of Chapter Twelve,
reflect Hmong culture?
5. What do traditional Hmong consider their most important
duties and obligations? What do American doctors consider their most
important duties and obligations?
6. In Chapter Eighteen, Fadiman writes, "As William
Osler said--or is said to have said--`Ask not what disease the person has, but
rather what person the disease has.'" How might have the events of this
book have unfolded if Osler's dictum were universally followed in the medical
profession? How would your relations with your own doctors change?
7. In matters of attitude, what might the average
American doctor learn from a Hmong txiv neeb (shaman)? What might the
txiv neeb learn from the doctor?
8. In her preface, the author says that while she
was working on this book, she often asked herself two questions: "What
is a good doctor?" "What is a good parent?" How do you think
she might have answered her own questions? How would you answer them?
9. At the end of Chapter Eighteen, Sukey Waller asks,
"Which is more important, the life or the soul?" What do you think?
The characters
10. The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
revolves around a small child who for much of the book is too young to speak
for herself, and at the end is unable to. Do you nonetheless feel you know Lia
Lee? Do you believe that even though she cannot walk or talk, she is a person
of value--and if so, why?
11. In Chapter Eight, after describing Foua's competence
as a mother and farmer in Laos, Fadiman quotes her as saying, "I miss having
something that really belongs to me." What has Foua lost? Is there anything
that still "really belongs" to her?
12. How do you feel about the Lees' reluctance to give
Lia her medicine as prescribed? Can you understand their motivation? Do you
sympathize with it?
13. Neil Ernst says, "I felt it was important
for these Hmongs to understand that there were certain elements of medicine
that we understood better than they did and that there were certain rules they
had to follow with their kids' lives." Why didn't this message get through
to the Lees? If you were Neil, would you feel this way too?
14. In Chapter Fifteen, Foua, who has heard that one
of the Ernst sons has leukemia, embraces Peggy. After all the conflict between
them, why are they finally able to resolve their differences? Do you think this
could have happened earlier?
15. Since the publication of the book, Anne Fadiman
has said that if she lived in Merced, she would choose Neil and Peggy as her
children's pediatricians. If you have children, would you?
16. Fadiman describes May Ying Xiong as not just an
interpreter but a cultural broker. What's the difference? What were May Ying's
contributions to the book?
17. Were you surprised by the quality of care and affection
given to Lia by her foster parents? How did Lia's foster parents feel about
Foua and Nao Kao? Was foster care ultimately to Lia's benefit or detriment?
18. The only American who fully won the Lees' trust
was Jeanine Hilt, their social worker. Why did Jeanine succeed where so many
others had failed?
19. The book contains brief but important sections
on three Hmong leaders--Jonas Vangay, Blia Yao Moua, and Dang Moua--who are
multilingual and gainfully employed. What did they teach Fadiman? Why did she
include them?
The writing
20. How might this book have been different if it had
been written by a Hmong? A doctor? An anthropologist?
21. From a writer's point of view, what are the advantages
and disadvantages of being an outsider in the two cultures Fadiman explores?
22. The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
is a literal translation of the Hmong phrase for epilepsy. Why do you think
the author chose such a long and difficult title?
23. The book has an unusual structure: Lia's story
occupies the odd-numbered chapters, and background material occupies the even-numbered
chapters. Why do you think Fadiman organized her narrative this way?
24. At the beginning of Chapter Two, Fadiman tells
the story of a Hmong student who gave an oral report on Fish Soup. What is the
concept of "fish soup," and how is it reflected in the book itself?
25. One of the ways by which Fadiman places the doctors
and the Lee family on equal footing is her choice to refer to all of them by
their first names (instead of saying, for instance, "Dr. Ernst").
What are some other ways?
26. Many readers have commented that The Spirit
Catches You and You Fall Down is a book without villains. Do you think that
from a literary point of view this is a flaw?