Literature DB >> 31729690

Falling, Dying Sheep, and the Divine: Notes on Thick Therapeutics in Peri-Urban Senegal.

Anne M Lovell1, Papa Mamadou Diagne2.   

Abstract

Peri-urban Senegal lies outside the influence of both the nation's historic public mental health model and contemporary global mental health. This paper examines how cultural logics in this underserved region spill over from social domains to widen the therapeutic sphere of psychoses and epilepsy. Observations and 60 carer and/or patient interviews concerning 36 patients afflicted by one or both conditions illustrate how the "crisis of the uncanny", a spectacular eruption of psychoses and seizures into the everyday, triggers trajectories across these domains. To resolve the crisis, patients and carers mobilize debts and obligations of extended kin and community, as well as a gift economy among strangers. The therapeutic and non-therapeutic are further linked through the semantics of falling, which associates this local term for the crisis with divine ecstasy and the slide from human to non-human forms of life. We introduce the concept of thick therapeutics to capture how the logics of sheep- other animal-human relationality, secular-divine politics of giving, and payment/sacrifice for healing imbue a therapeutic assemblage continually constructed through actions of patients, carers and healers. We ask what implications therapeutic thickening might have for mental health futures, such as monetized payment under global mental health.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Epilepsy; Eruption of the uncanny; Psychosis; Senegal; Thick therapeutics

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31729690     DOI: 10.1007/s11013-019-09657-2

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


  15 in total

1.  Sacrifice, plants, and western pharmaceuticals: money and health care in northern Ghana.

Authors:  B Bierlich
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  1999-09

Review 2.  Research on help-seeking for mental illness in Africa: Dominant approaches and possible alternatives.

Authors:  Sara Cooper
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2016-07-09

3.  Cultural response to mental illness in Senegal: Reflections through patient companions--Part I. Methods and descriptive data.

Authors:  R R Franklin; D Sarr; M Gueye; O Sylla; R Collignon
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1996-02       Impact factor: 4.634

4.  Mental Ill Health, Recovery and the Family Assemblage.

Authors:  Rhys Price-Robertson; Lenore Manderson; Cameron Duff
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2017-09

5.  Grand challenges in global mental health.

Authors:  Pamela Y Collins; Vikram Patel; Sarah S Joestl; Dana March; Thomas R Insel; Abdallah S Daar; Warwick Anderson; Muhammad A Dhansay; Anthony Phillips; Susan Shurin; Mark Walport; Wendy Ewart; Sir John Savill; Isabel A Bordin; E Jane Costello; Maureen Durkin; Christopher Fairburn; Roger I Glass; Wayne Hall; Yueqin Huang; Steven E Hyman; Kay Jamison; Sylvia Kaaya; Shitij Kapur; Arthur Kleinman; Adesola Ogunniyi; Angel Otero-Ojeda; Mu-Ming Poo; Vijayalakshmi Ravindranath; Barbara J Sahakian; Shekhar Saxena; Peter A Singer; Dan J Stein
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-07-06       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 6.  The role of global traditional and complementary systems of medicine in the treatment of mental health disorders.

Authors:  Oye Gureje; Gareth Nortje; Victor Makanjuola; Bibilola D Oladeji; Soraya Seedat; Rachel Jenkins
Journal:  Lancet Psychiatry       Date:  2015-01-28       Impact factor: 27.083

Review 7.  Effectiveness of traditional healers in treating mental disorders: a systematic review.

Authors:  Gareth Nortje; Bibilola Oladeji; Oye Gureje; Soraya Seedat
Journal:  Lancet Psychiatry       Date:  2016-02       Impact factor: 27.083

8.  Of shifting economies and making ends meet: the changing role of the accompagnant at the Fann Psychiatric Clinic in Dakar, Senegal.

Authors:  Katie Kilroy-Marac
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2014-09

9.  Genealogies and Anthropologies of Global Mental Health.

Authors:  Anne M Lovell; Ursula M Read; Claudia Lang
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2019-12

10.  Local suffering and the global discourse of mental health and human rights: an ethnographic study of responses to mental illness in rural Ghana.

Authors:  Ursula M Read; Edward Adiibokah; Solomon Nyame
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2009-10-14       Impact factor: 4.185

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  2 in total

1.  Genealogies and Anthropologies of Global Mental Health.

Authors:  Anne M Lovell; Ursula M Read; Claudia Lang
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2019-12

2.  Understanding global mental health: a conceptual review.

Authors:  Vian Rajabzadeh; Erin Burn; Sana Z Sajun; Mimi Suzuki; Victoria Jane Bird; Stefan Priebe
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2021-03
  2 in total

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