Publication | Closed Access
Culture and Depression: Studies in the Anthropology and Cross-Cultural Psychiatry of Affect and Disorder.
495
Citations
19
References
1987
Year
Cross-cultural ResearchEducationCultural FactorMental HealthPsychologyProvocative WorkMood SymptomCross-cultural PsychiatryMedical AnthropologyCross-cultural PsychologyDepression RaisePsychiatryDepressionCultural SensitivityPsychosocial IssueCultureCross-cultural PerspectiveCultural PsychiatryAnthropologyMedicineCultural AnthropologyPsychopathologyCultural Psychology
Cross‑cultural research on depression is producing innovative and provocative work on emotions and illness. The book surveys anthropologists, psychiatrists, and psychologists who explore controversies, agreements, and conceptual and methodological issues in cross‑cultural depression research. The authors begin with a historical review and then present anthropological case studies that investigate challenges in assessing depression across cultures. The book’s extensive scholarship enriches cross‑cultural studies of emotions and mental illness, highlighting how anthropological approaches raise central questions for psychiatry and psychology while cross‑cultural depression research provokes equally provocative questions for anthropology.
Some of the most innovative and provocative work on the emotions and illness is occurring in cross-cultural research on depression. Culture and Depression presents the work of anthropologists, psychiatrists, and psychologists who examine the controversies, agreements, and conceptual and methodological problems that arise in the course of such research. A book of enormous depth and breadth of discussion, Culture and Depression enriches the cross-cultural study of emotions and mental illness and leads it in new directions. It commences with a historical study followed by a series of anthropological accounts that examine the problems that arise when depression is assessed in other cultures. This is a work of impressive scholarship which demonstrates that anthropological approaches to affect and illness raise central questions for psychiatry and psychology, and that cross-cultural studies of depression raise equally provocative questions for anthropology.
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