Literature DB >> 10626273

Imagined lives, suffering, and the work of culture: the embodied discourses of conflict in modern Tibet.

C R Janes1.   

Abstract

This article explores the cultural epidemiology of rlung ("loong") disorder among Tibetans living in the cities and towns of the modern Chinese state of Tibet. Rlung, glossed as air or wind, is the most important of the three humors of the classical Tibetan ethnomedical system. Considered by Tibetans to be contingent upon multiple social, emotional, and religious phenomena, rlung disorders are fertile ground for the development of etiological discourses that incorporate the social and political crises that are part of the rapidly changing Tibetan plateau. In this essay I locate rlung disorder in a confluence of Tibetan ethnomedical constructions of the mind-body-universe linkage, in which rlung stands as the chief symbolic mediator, with ethnic conflict, rapid economic development, and the localization of global debates over Tibetan suffering and human rights.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10626273     DOI: 10.1525/maq.1999.13.4.391

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  4 in total

1.  Nepali concepts of psychological trauma: the role of idioms of distress, ethnopsychology and ethnophysiology in alleviating suffering and preventing stigma.

Authors:  Brandon A Kohrt; Daniel J Hruschka
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2010-06

Review 2.  Cultural concepts of distress and psychiatric disorders: literature review and research recommendations for global mental health epidemiology.

Authors:  Brandon A Kohrt; Andrew Rasmussen; Bonnie N Kaiser; Emily E Haroz; Sujen M Maharjan; Byamah B Mutamba; Joop T V M de Jong; Devon E Hinton
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2013-12-23       Impact factor: 7.196

3.  Unbalanced Flows in the Subtle Body: Tibetan Understandings of Psychiatric Illness and How to Deal With It.

Authors:  Geoffrey Samuel
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2019-06

4.  rLung, Mind, and Mental Health: The Notion of "Wind" in Tibetan Conceptions of Mind and Mental Illness.

Authors:  Susannah Deane
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2019-06
  4 in total

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