ABSTRACT

This book explores diasporic identities and lived experiences that emerge in global patterns of oppression and considers the consequences of treatment and cure when patients experience mental illness due to war, displacement and surveillance. Going beyond psychiatric institutions and conventional psychiatric knowledge by focusing on informal networks, socially contingent value systems, and cultural sites of healing, this book considers how communities utilize trauma productively for healing. The chapters in this volume consider the detection of mental illness and its treatment through claims to citizenship and belonging as well as denials of social identity and psychic experiences by institutions of the state. A multidisciplinary team of contributors and international range of case studies explore topics such as colonial trauma, feminized trauma, reproductive violence, military mental health and more.

This book is an essential resource for psychologists, psychiatrists, political scientists, sociologists and anthropologists, as well as scholars and those involved in policymaking and practice.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Conceptualizing the Global

part 1|44 pages

Trauma, Globality and Death

chapter 1|23 pages

Where Psyche, History and Politics Merge

Decolonizing PTSD and Traumatic Memory With Fanon

chapter 2|19 pages

Obligatory Death in Wuhan

The Power to Decide Who Died, and Therapies for Those Who Survived

part 3|34 pages

Culture, Displacement and Healing

chapter 5|18 pages

Healing the Sickness of Fighting

Medicalization and Warriordom in Postcolonial North America

chapter 6|14 pages

Jinns and Trauma

Unbounded Spirits and the Ontology of Mental Illness in Pakistan

part 4|62 pages

Global Bodies, Logics and Clinics