Literature DB >> 9023608

Psychiatry's culture.

R Littlewood1.   

Abstract

Culture remains an ambiguous concept for psychiatry: deprecated by the assumption that it is secondary to biomedical reality, yet at the same time some notion of 'culture' has served to represent the modern against the primitive. Contemporary clinical understandings of culture derive from imperial medicine which had applied the accepted distinction between the biological form and the cultural content of psychopathology to local illnesses which could not easily be fitted into the European nosology. The later concept of culture-bound pathology, like the psychoanalysts' 'modal personality', only imperfectly escaped from evaluative assumptions of 'development', but it is difficult to argue that psychiatry provided British colonial administrations with any significant ideological justification.

Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 9023608     DOI: 10.1177/002076409604200402

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Soc Psychiatry        ISSN: 0020-7640


  4 in total

1.  The development and therapeutic modalities of a transcultural child psychiatry service.

Authors:  Toby Measham; Cécile Rousseau; Lucie Nadeau
Journal:  Can Child Adolesc Psychiatr Rev       Date:  2005-08

2.  How do psychiatrists in India construct their professional identity? A critical literature review.

Authors:  Clement Bayetti; Sushrut Jadhav; Smita N Deshpande
Journal:  Indian J Psychiatry       Date:  2017 Jan-Mar       Impact factor: 1.759

3.  The psychological impact of sexual torture: A gender-critical study of the perspective of UK-based clinicians and survivors.

Authors:  Roghieh Dehghan; Caroline Osella
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2022-04-06

4.  Post-traumatic stress disorder and urban violence: an anthropological study.

Authors:  Juliana Da Silva-Mannel; Sérgio Baxter Andreoli; Denise Martin
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2013-10-25       Impact factor: 3.390

  4 in total

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