Fall 2014

Culture, Affect, and Psychiatry

Listed in: Anthropology and Sociology, as ANTH-310

Faculty

Christopher T. Dole (Section 01)

Description

This seminar draws on readings from medical and psychological anthropology, cultural psychiatry, and science studies to examine mental health and illness as a set of subjective experiences, social processes, and objects of knowledge and intervention. The course invites students to think through the complex relationships between categories of psychiatric knowledge, techniques of clinical practice, and the subjectivities of persons living with mental illness. The course will take up such questions as:  Does mental illness vary across social, cultural, and historical contexts?  How does the language of psychopathology, and the clinical setting of its use, affect people’s experience of psychological and emotional suffering?  What novel forms of care, as well as neglect, have emerged with the “pharmaceuticalization” of psychiatry?  How does contemporary psychiatry articulate a distinctive relationship between affect and power?  These questions, among others, will be examined through richly contextualized ethnographic and historical writings, literary accounts, clinical studies, and films.  The course will emphasize a comparative approach, as it explores the ways that anthropologists have struggled to examine mental illness and mental health in a cross-cultural perspective.

Limited to 25 students.  Fall semester.  Professor C. Dole.

ANTH 310 - L/D

Section 01
M 02:00 PM - 03:20 PM MORG 110
W 02:00 PM - 03:20 PM MORG 110

ISBN Title Publisher Author(s) Comment Book Store Price
Daughters of Parvati Pinto Amherst Books TBD
Of Two Minds: The Growing Disorder in American Psychiatry Luhrman Amherst Books TBD
Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche Watters Amherst Books TBD
The Empire of Trauma: An Inquiry into the Condition of Victimhood Fassin Amherst Books TBD

These books are available locally at Amherst Books.

Offerings

2024-25: Not offered
Other years: Offered in Fall 2014, Spring 2019, Spring 2022