Literature DB >> 25218721

Between Jewish settlers and Palestinian citizens of Israel: negotiating ethno-national power relations through the discourse of PTSD.

Keren Friedman-Peleg1.   

Abstract

This article traces a critical change in the professional implementation of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD): the broadening of its use from an apolitical sign of psychopathology, to an interpretative framework in which clinical questions of diagnosis and treatment intersect with political questions of ethno-national power relations. The aid discourse of a new NGO--the "Israeli Trauma Coalition" (ITC)--serves as my case study. I analyze how the experts negotiated similar clinical questions, associated with a single biomedical idiom, PTSD, but in relation to two different matrices of political relations: the "Disengagement Plan" (August 2005), which led to the evacuation of National-Orthodox Jews who had settled in the Occupied Territories, and the Second Lebanon War (July 2006), which led to the exposure of Palestinian citizens of Israel to missile attacks. In particular, I shed light on the ITC's decision-making processes regarding the organizational representation of suffering and its empirical validation. I found that the distress of both groups has been left dangling between the processes of medicalization and de-medicalization, while a context-related transition from one meaning of trauma to another has taken place. Finally, I discuss how this implementation of PTSD compares with other national sites of its growing globalization.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25218721     DOI: 10.1007/s11013-014-9397-4

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


  7 in total

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Authors:  Joshua Breslau
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2004-06

2.  Writing trauma: emotion, ethnography, and the politics of suffering among Somali returnees in Ethiopia.

Authors:  Christina Zarowsky
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2004-06

3.  Reconciliation and Revenge in Post-Apartheid South Africa. Rethinking Legal Pluralism and Human Rights.

Authors: 
Journal:  Curr Anthropol       Date:  2000-02

4.  THE CANON--3: The harmony of illusions: inventing post-traumatic stress disorder, by Allan Young.

Authors:  Jean N Scandlyn
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2012-04

5.  Trauma and humanitarian translation in Liberia: the tale of open mole.

Authors:  Sharon Alane Abramowitz
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2010-06

6.  The work of indebtedness: the traumatic present of late capitalist Chile.

Authors:  Clara Han
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2004-06

7.  The political economy of 'trauma' in Haiti in the democratic era of insecurity.

Authors:  Erica Caple James
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2004-06
  7 in total
  1 in total

1.  "You can't choose these emotions… they simply jump up": Ambiguities in Resilience-Building Interventions in Israel.

Authors:  Ariel Yankellevich; Yehuda C Goodman
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2017-03
  1 in total

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