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Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments
This timely volume analyzes the growing burden of mental, behavioral and social problems in low-income countries, examines the sources of the substantial morbidity rates and their relation to development, and assesses current efforts to cope with them. It identifies opportunities for effective mental health interventions, methods of treatment, culturally appropriate prevention programs, and sound policy formation. It relates the mental health consequences of violence, dislocation, poverty, and the disenfranchisement of women to the most pressing economic, political, and environmental problems of our time.
This innovative volume is an extended intellectual conversation about the ways personal lives are being undone and remade today. Examining the ethnography of the modern subject, this preeminent group of scholars probes the continuity and diversity of modes of personhood across a range of Western and non-Western societies. Contributors consider what happens to individual subjectivity when stable or imagined environments such as nations and communities are transformed or displaced by free trade economics, terrorism, and war; how new information and medical technologies reshape the relation one has to oneself; and which forms of subjectivity and life possibilities are produced against a world in pieces. The transdisciplinary conversation includes anthropologists, historians of science, psychologists, a literary critic, a philosopher, physicians, and an economist. The authors touch on how we think and write about contingency, human agency, and ethics today.
The essays in this volume reflect on the nature of subjectivity in
the diverse places where anthropologists work at the beginning of
the twenty-first century. Contributors explore everyday modes of
social and psychological experience, the constitution of the
subject, and forms of subjection that shape the lives of Basque
youth, Indonesian artists, members of nongovernmental HIV/AIDS
programs in China and the Republic of Congo, psychiatrists and the
mentally ill in Morocco and Ireland, and persons who have suffered
trauma or been displaced by violence in the Middle East and in
South and Southeast Asia.
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