Literature DB >> 17955349

Reconfiguring the empty center: drinking, sobriety, and identity in Native American women's narratives.

Erica Prussing1.   

Abstract

Although anthropologists have paid little attention to popular American psychological discourse about addiction and recovery, the cultural politics of its engagement by Native North American communities warrant closer examination. By ethnographically contextualizing personal narratives, this paper describes how addiction/recovery discourse has been selectively engaged by younger generations of women in a northern Plains reservation community. Sobriety is not only a therapeutic transformation but also a socially negotiated identity change in this community and, therefore, engages ongoing local identity politics. Many community members evaluate the legitimacy of claims to Native identity by essentializing boundaries between Native and non-Native, as well as between past and present-a discursive convention that O'Nell has called "the rhetoric of the empty center" (Disciplined Hearts: History, Identity and Depression in an American Indian Community. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996, p. 55). Yet by selectively appropriating elements of addiction/recovery discourse, younger women in the 1990s increasingly positioned emotional experience and expression as central arbiters of the legitimacy of Native identity. In so doing, they reconfigured the rhetoric of the empty center, eliciting both controversy and support from the larger community. This analysis highlights new dimensions of the social life of addiction/recovery discourse in contemporary Native North America, and calls for increased ethnographic attention to how localized cultural politics can orient the ways in which communities engage therapeutic discourses.

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Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17955349     DOI: 10.1007/s11013-007-9064-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry        ISSN: 0165-005X


  14 in total

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Authors:  G Quintero; M Nichter
Journal:  J Psychoactive Drugs       Date:  1996 Jul-Sep

Review 2.  Culture and the restoration of self among former American Indian drinkers.

Authors:  P Spicer
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2001-07       Impact factor: 4.634

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Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 5.691

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Authors:  S J Kunitz; J E Levy
Journal:  Q J Stud Alcohol       Date:  1974-03

5.  Maintaining abstinence in a northern plains tribe.

Authors:  Majorie Bezdek; Paul Spicer
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2006-06

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Authors:  L Jilek-Aall
Journal:  J Stud Alcohol Suppl       Date:  1981-01

7.  In the subjunctive mode: epilepsy narratives in Turkey.

Authors:  B J Good; M J Del Vecchio Good
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1994-03       Impact factor: 4.634

8.  Alcohol use among American Indian adolescents: the role of culture in pathological drinking.

Authors:  T D O'Nell; C M Mitchell
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1996-02       Impact factor: 4.634

9.  Suffering and its professional transformation: toward an ethnography of interpersonal experience.

Authors:  A Kleinman; J Kleinman
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1991-09

10.  Narrativity and the representation of experience in American Indian discourses about drinking.

Authors:  P Spicer
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1998-06
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  3 in total

1.  "I'm Stuck": Women's Navigations of Social Networks and Prescription Drug Misuse in Central Appalachia.

Authors:  Lesly-Marie Buer; Carl G Leukefeld; Jennifer R Havens
Journal:  North Am Dialogue       Date:  2016-10-28

2.  The experience of addiction as told by the addicted: incorporating biological understandings into self-story.

Authors:  Rachel R Hammer; Molly J Dingel; Jenny E Ostergren; Katherine E Nowakowski; Barbara A Koenig
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2012-12

3.  Utilizing drumming for American Indians/Alaska Natives with substance use disorders: a focus group study.

Authors:  Daniel Dickerson; Francis Robichaud; Cheryl Teruya; Kathleen Nagaran; Yih-Ing Hser
Journal:  Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 3.829

  3 in total

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