Literature DB >> 23765681

Reconsidering American Indian historical trauma: lessons from an early Gros Ventre war narrative.

Joseph P Gone1.   

Abstract

Professional clinicians and human services providers are increasingly attributing the mental health problems of American Indians (AIs) to historical trauma (HT). As an alternative to established psychiatric disorders, AI HT was formulated to explain enduring mental health disparities as originating in tribal experiences of Euro-American colonization. As a result, AI HT has been described as the collective, cumulative, and intergenerational psychosocial disability resulting from massive group-based oppression, such as forced relocation, political subjugation, cultural domination, and genocide. One objective of the HT construct is to frame AI distress and dysfunction in social and historical terms. Given widespread indigenous experiences of colonization, the debilitating effects of HT are presumed to affect most AI communities today. With this background in mind, I explore AI HT with specific reference to a "war narrative" obtained by an anthropologist in 1901 from an elderly Gros Ventre woman. In this account, Watches All described her participation in a historic intertribal battle, and her subsequent captivity and escape from the enemy during the late 1860s. This historical narrative references many first-hand experiences that would today be identified as traumatogenic. Interestingly, however, this account complicates several assumptions underlying AI HT, leading to vexing questions of whether Watches All's ordeal actually qualifies as an instance of AI HT. No matter how one answers these questions, such ambiguity highlights serious theoretical confusions requiring elaboration and refinement if AI HT is to remain a useful construct in the behavioral health sciences.
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Entities:  

Keywords:  American Indians; historical trauma; mental health; narrative genres; postcolonial discourse

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23765681     DOI: 10.1177/1363461513489722

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry        ISSN: 1363-4615


  6 in total

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Journal:  Am J Community Psychol       Date:  2014-09

2.  American Indian historical trauma: Anticolonial prescriptions for healing, resilience, and survivance.

Authors:  William E Hartmann; Dennis C Wendt; Rachel L Burrage; Andrew Pomerville; Joseph P Gone
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  2019-01

Review 3.  American Indian and Alaska Native resilience along the life course and across generations: A literature review.

Authors:  Christina E Oré; Nicolette I Teufel-Shone; Tara M Chico-Jarillo
Journal:  Am Indian Alsk Native Ment Health Res       Date:  2016

4.  The Historical Oppression Scale: Preliminary conceptualization and measurement of historical oppression among Indigenous peoples of the United States.

Authors:  Catherine E McKinley; Shamra Boel-Studt; Lynette M Renner; Charles R Figley; Shanondora Billiot; Katherine P Theall
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2020-03-13

5.  Indigenous Men Adhering to Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy: Navigating Through Culturally Unsafe Spaces While Caring for Their Health.

Authors:  Meck Chongo; Josée G Lavoie; Javier Mignone; Nadine R Caron; Henry G Harder; Rob Chase
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2020-09-22

6.  Cultural efficacy as a novel component of understanding linkages between culture and mental health in Indigenous communities.

Authors:  Miigis B Gonzalez; Kelley J Sittner; Melissa L Walls
Journal:  Am J Community Psychol       Date:  2022-03-14
  6 in total

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