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2.
Cult Med Psychiatry ; 43(4): 710-723, 2019 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31729692

ABSTRACT

The author suggests to consider some important hidden connections in Global Mental Health (GMH) discourse and interventions, above all the political meaning of suffering and symptoms, the power of psychiatric diagnostic categories (both Western and traditional) to name and to occult at once other conflicts, and the implicit criticism expressed by so-called local healing knowledge and its epistemologies. These issues, by emphasizing the importance to explore other ontologies, help to understand the perplexity and resistance that GMH and its agenda meet among many scholars and professionals, who denounce the risks of reproducing and globalizing Western hegemonic values concerning health, illness, and healing.


Subject(s)
Global Health , Mental Disorders/ethnology , Mental Health , Politics , Psychiatry , Cultural Diversity , Humans , Medicine, Traditional , Mental Disorders/drug therapy
3.
Transcult Psychiatry ; 53(3): 261-85, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27154972

ABSTRACT

This work aims to rethink the relationship between anthropology and cultural psychiatry from a historical perspective, through reflections on the dynamics of forgetting and remembering in the context of migration. While migrants' symptoms often bear cultural hallmarks of suffering, they also reveal images of a traumatic history, which resurface in moments of danger, uncertainty, and crisis. I claim these symptoms are allegories of a dispossessed past, and can be interpreted as counter-memories, as "palimpsests" of an eclipsed script. Trauma symptoms keep returning to a collective past, and thus can be considered a particular form of historical consciousness. Psychiatric diagnoses may obscure these counter-memories. In particular, the diagnostic category of posttraumatic stress disorder that is commonly attached to traumatic experiences in current clinical practice recognizes the truth of individual traumatic events, but at the same time contributes to concealing the political, racial, and historical roots of suffering.


Subject(s)
Black People/psychology , Racism/psychology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychology , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Transients and Migrants/psychology , Ethnopsychology , Humans , Imagination , Memory , Politics
4.
Med Anthropol ; 34(6): 551-71, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26258605

ABSTRACT

Based on narratives of asylum-seekers from sub-Saharan Africa in northern Italy, in this article I analyze the narrative strategies used by immigrants to meet the eligibility criteria established by asylum law. For many of them, this means "arranging" biographical details within what I call "a moral economy of lying." The first question I discuss is what types of experience and 'subject positions' these narrative strategies reveal or generate. I then examine the arbitrariness and the bureaucratic violence of the asylum evaluation process, and the role of these procedures in the making of nation-language and current technologies of citizenship. Finally, I consider the politics of testification, recognition, and memory these discourses and practices combine to shape. I analyze these issues from an historical point of view of the politics of identity, truth, and falsehood as imposed in a recent past by colonizers onto the colonized.


Subject(s)
Deception , Politics , Refugees/psychology , Uncertainty , Africa/ethnology , Anthropology , Female , Humans , Male , Morals
5.
Transcult Psychiatry ; 42(3): 367-93, 2005 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16268234

ABSTRACT

Ethnopsychiatry is today a contested field, in which concepts and terms such as ethnicity, identity, culture, citizenship, traditional therapies or symbolic efficacy are used in a very controversial way. Recent accusations of'racism' against some ethnopsychiatrists have contributed to making more obscure the deep roots of these issues and controversies. Little attention has been paid to analysing the complex legacy of colonial psychiatry, as well as the relationships among current definitions of 'culture' and 'belonging', post-colonial subjectivities and migration. In this article, the authors briefly analyse the contributions of Italian ethnopsychiatry and investigate the hidden expressions of racism and prejudice still characterizing mental health workers' attitudes toward immigrants. It is argued that a 'generative' and community-based ethnopsychiatry can challenge the hegemony of western psychiatry and improve the quality of therapeutic strategies.


Subject(s)
Culture , Emigration and Immigration , Ethnopsychology/methods , Politics , Psychiatry/methods , Social Identification , Anthropology, Cultural , Colonialism , Europe , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Italy , Prejudice , Sociology, Medical
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