乌干达战后的心理和创伤理论。

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Transcultural Psychiatry Pub Date : 2025-01-08 DOI:10.1177/13634615241296311
Lars Williams, Tanya Marie Luhrmann
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引用次数: 0

摘要

乌干达北部经过多年的武装冲突后,许多当地人转向福音派教会寻求治疗和恢复的帮助。我们观察到,这些教堂的治疗实践鼓励人们对心灵是什么、心灵如何运作以及它是否与外部世界有界限或多孔性的特定概念。在这些人长大成人的传统文化背景下,许多人接受复仇可以从外部攻击超自然。基于2015年至2025年间在该地区进行的民族志研究,本文认为这些关于心灵的新观点(广义上的)可能会帮助一些社区成员从武装冲突引起的创伤经历中恢复(在一定程度上),通过将创伤建模为非超自然,并将心灵建模为受上帝保护免受攻击。学习一种理解心灵及其与外部世界的界限的新方法。这一论点有助于对心理人类学的辩论,以及对当地心理理论可能塑造心理体验的方式的辩论。
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Theories of mind and trauma after war in Uganda.

After years of armed conflict in northern Uganda, many local people have turned to Evangelical churches for help with healing and recovery. We observe that the healing practices in these churches encourage particular notions of what the mind is, how the mind works and whether it is bounded or porous to the outside world. In the traditional cultural setting in which these people grew to adulthood, many accept that vengeance can attack supernaturally from without. Based on ethnographic research conducted in the region between 2015 and 2025, this article argues that these new ideas about mind (broadly conceived) may help some community members recover (to some extent) from traumatic experiences arising from the armed conflict by modeling trauma as not supernatural, and modeling the mind as protected by God from attack. Learning a new way of understanding the mind and its boundaries with the outside world-e.g., as more closed and bounded-and learning to practice a certain amount of control over this boundary, may have a significant effect on the experiences of mental distress This argument contributes to debates on anthropology of mind, and on the way local theories of mind may shape mental experience.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
12.00%
发文量
93
期刊介绍: Transcultural Psychiatry is a fully peer reviewed international journal that publishes original research and review articles on cultural psychiatry and mental health. Cultural psychiatry is concerned with the social and cultural determinants of psychopathology and psychosocial treatments of the range of mental and behavioural problems in individuals, families and human groups. In addition to the clinical research methods of psychiatry, it draws from the disciplines of psychiatric epidemiology, medical anthropology and cross-cultural psychology.
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