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Dienstag | 17.15 Uhr | What is 'Global' in 'Global Mental Health'? Professor Harish Naraindas, School of Social Sciences, JNU, Delhi This paper is an ethnography of a psychosomatic department in a German Kur Klinik (spa?), where past-life aetiologies are invoked and addressed through art, bodywork, breath-work, exotic music, trance and collective psychotherapeutic journeys that meld the past and the present and the East and the West. This is played out against a large mountain park and a Therme on either side of the Klinik, each of which sport Greek, Roman and Anglo-Chinese motifs in their architecture and landscape. These together function as a formal and para-formal therapeutic resource for patients, who may draw energy through divination techniques from spots in the park, or do aqua gymnastics with their ailing bodies in the Therme. This ensemble is enabled by the therapists, some of whom traverse these several worlds literally and figuratively by interning with Brazilian shamans and Hindu gurus, and fusing them with New Age psychotherapies from California invented by Germans, along with an initial training in Protestant theology. This psychedelic world, paid for by German socialised health insurance and the Beihilfe, challenges us to rethink notions of the global and the local. It asks, among other things, why does “mental health” in the Global South appears to revolve around the material substance of the psychotropic drug, while the quiddity called psychosomatic medicine, which in the German context is a separate discipline divorced from psychiatry, is normatively built on eschewing psychotropic drugs; why in the Global South is “mental health” built on the distinction between superstition (past lives, trance, possession, and other forms of “ritualised” behaviour) and science (psychiatry, rational diagnosis, asylums, psychotropic drugs,), while in Germany (exemplary of the Global North?) the two seem wilfully fused. Why does the Global North proselytise to the Global South to keep the “the vernacular, the non-human, the past and the East” out of the East, and offers the “West” in lieu, while it wilfully imports the “past, the vernacular, the non-human and the East” into the West, and proceeds to seemingly meld the East and West in the West? In the light of such a therapeutic melange, what exactly is global in Global Mental Health? Adresse 4110 110.02.05 Voßstr. 2 69115 Heidelberg Veranstalter Südasien-Institut, Abteilung Ethnologie Homepage Veranstalter https://www.sai.uni-heidelberg.de/ethno/mahassa/index.php?language=de&page=medicalAntWorkGroup Alle Termine der Veranstaltung 'Medical Anthropology Forum - SoSe 2019': Dienstag, 14. Mai 2019, 17.15 Uhr Personhood and Ritual Healing in Hyolmo Shamanism (Nepal) Dr. Davide Torri (South Asia Institute, University of Heidelberg) Dienstag, 28. Mai 2019, 17.15 Uhr Dying to be heard: Hmong youth and marital norms, side notes from the field Bianca Ksoll, M.A. (Global Content Group, Inc.) Dienstag, 11. Juni 2019, 17.15 Uhr Dr. Anna Andreeva (Karl Jaspers Centre, University of Heidelberg) Dienstag, 09. Juli 2019, 17.15 Uhr What is 'Global' in 'Global Mental Health'? Professor Harish Naraindas, School of Social Sciences, JNU, Delhi Dienstag, 23. Juli 2019, 17.15 Uhr Like a Fruit without a Skin: Life Forces and their Protection in Tamil Siddha Pharmacology Justus Weiß, M.A.
Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Tübingen Freitag, 26. Juli 2019, 16.15 Uhr Agi Wittich (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) |