Literature DB >> 25604864

On the Social Constructionist Approach to Traumatized Selves in Post-disaster Settings: State-Induced Violence in Nandigram, India.

Kumar Ravi Priya1.   

Abstract

Through the use of concepts such as traumatization and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the distressing experiences of survivors are understood in psychology and psychiatry primarily as the behavioural symptoms resulting supposedly from an incomplete emotional and cognitive processing of traumatic events. Due to such an exclusive focus on the intra-psychic processes, besides the survivors' healing facilitated by cultural beliefs and symbols, their trauma-related distress associated with the cultural interpretation of loss is also generally ignored. This paper illustrates the utility of the social constructionist paradigm in understanding the survivors' experiences of suffering and healing within the cultural and socio-political context of violence through an ethnographic study among the poor farmers of Nandigram, India, inflicted by violence from the state government as it tried to forcibly acquire their land to build a chemical factory. How the traumatized selves experience intense distress resulting from disruptions to a sense of wholeness and how this wholeness may be reformulated through culturally valued beliefs are highlighted in the themes of suffering ('experience of PTSD symptoms', 'betrayed self', 'overwhelmed by loss', and 'biographical disruption') and healing ('moral re-affirmation', 'sense of togetherness', 'sense of security due to change in political environment') presented in the vignettes.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25604864     DOI: 10.1007/s11013-014-9423-6

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


  22 in total

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Authors:  D Summerfield
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1999-05       Impact factor: 4.634

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Journal:  Qual Health Res       Date:  2000-05

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Authors:  P J Bracken
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 4.634

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Authors:  Anthony J Marsella; Michael A Christopher
Journal:  Psychiatr Clin North Am       Date:  2004-09

5.  Cultures of trauma: anthropological views of posttraumatic stress disorder in international health.

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

6.  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

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Authors:  A Kleinman; L Eisenberg; B Good
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1978-02       Impact factor: 25.391

8.  The poor have become rich, and the rich have become poor: collective trauma in the Guinean Languette.

Authors:  Sharon A Abramowitz
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 4.634

9.  Psychological responses to war and atrocity: the limitations of current concepts.

Authors:  P J Bracken; J E Giller; D Summerfield
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1995-04       Impact factor: 4.634

10.  Loss of self: a fundamental form of suffering in the chronically ill.

Authors:  K Charmaz
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  1983-07
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  1 in total

1.  A pilot study adapting and validating the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ) and PTSD checklist-5 (PCL-5) with Indian women from slums reporting gender-based violence.

Authors:  Anushka R Patel; Elana Newman; Julia Richardson
Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2022-01-28       Impact factor: 2.809

  1 in total

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