The butterfly and the serpent: Culture,psychopathology and biomedicine |
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Authors: | Roland Littlewood Maurice Lipsedge |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institute of Social Anthropology, Oxford University, Oxford, UK;(2) Department of Psychiatry, Birmingham University, Birmingham, UK;(3) Department of Psychological Medicine, Guy's Hospital London, London, UK |
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Abstract: | Cultural explanations of psychopathology in the West have rarely employed models derived by anthropologists for small-scale non-literate communities. Some general features of those ritual patterns usually classed as culture-bound syndromes are applicable to Western neurosis. Such reactions articulate both personal predicament and public concerns. usually core structural oppositions between age groups or the sexes. They gain their power. by relying on certain unquestionable assumptions which. although beyond everyday jural relationships, articulate such relationships. In the case of Western reactions, such mystical sanction is provided by biomedicine. Theoretical paradigms emphasize either the individual pragmatic or expressive aspects, or social homeostasis. |
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