Publication | Closed Access
The necessity of an attention to Eurocentrism and colonial technologies: an addition to critical mental health literature
37
Citations
30
References
2015
Year
Critical Race TheoryColonialismDecolonialityMental HealthCultural StudiesColonial TechnologiesAfrican American StudiesMedical HistoryMedical AnthropologyEthnic StudiesLanguage StudiesCritical PerspectivesAnti-oppressive PracticeBiopoliticsCultural CosmopolitanismPost-colonial CriticismDecolonial StudiesCritical TheoryPostcolonial StudiesEurocentric ConceptualizationAnti-racismCultureHumanitiesAnthropologyMedicalizationColonial Studies
Critical perspectives in mental health and the highly influential contributions of those who identify with and/or ally with the psychiatric-survivor, consumer-survivor, ex-patient, or mad movements have provoked an appreciation of the many exposed epistemological, methodological, and ethical issues that (re)produce violence within biomedical psychiatry. What is often left uninterrogated is the reliance on a Eurocentric conceptualization of history within articulations of struggle and when attending to the political and social contexts of critique. The effect of this enduring Eurocentrism is often an inattention to the complicit influences of colonial and imperial projects on the practices and technologies of dehumanization, taxonomization, and the establishment of human hierarchies to rationalize violence through the implementation of racial and eugenic rationale. The imperative of this attention to Eurocentrism is suggested from a synthesis of contributions from critical mental health, postcolonial, and critical race literature.
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