Psychiatric Contours

Psychiatric Contours

New African Histories of Madness

  • Autor: Hunt, Nancy Rose; Büschel, Hubertus
  • Editor: Duke University Press
  • Col·lecció: Theory in Forms
  • ISBN: 9781478026112
  • eISBN Pdf: 9781478059325
  • Lloc de publicació:  Durham , United States
  • Any de publicació digital: 2024
  • Mes: Març
  • Pàgines: 328
  • Idioma: Anglés
Psychiatric Contours investigates new histories of psychiatry, derangement, and agitated subjectivities in colonial and decolonizing Africa. The volume lets the multivalent term madness broaden perception, well beyond the psychiatric. Many chapters detect the mad or the psychiatric in unhinged persons, frantic collectives, and distressing situations. Others investigate individuals suffering from miscategorization. A key Foucauldian word, vivacity, illuminates how madness aligns with pathology, creativity, turbulence, and psychopolitics. The archives, patient-authored or not, speak to furies and fantasies inside asylums, colonial institutions, decolonizing missions, and slave ships. The frayed edges of politicized deliria open up the senses and optics of psychiatry’s history in Africa far beyond clinical spaces and classification. The volume also proposes fresh concepts, notably the vernacular, to suggest how to work with emic clues in a granular fashion and telescope the psychiatric within histories of madness. With chapters stretching across much of ex-British and ex-French colonial Africa, Psychiatric Contours attends to the words, autobiographies, and hallucinations of the stigmatized and afflicted as well as of the powerful. Expatriate psychiatrists with cameras, prying authorities, fearful missionaries, and colonial anthropologists enter these readings beside patients, asylums, and boarding schools via research on possession “hysteria” and schizophrenia. In brief, this book demonstrates novel ways of writing not only medical history but all subaltern and global histories.

Contributors. Hubertus Büschel, Raphaël Gallien, Matthew M. Heaton, Richard Hölzl, Nancy Rose Hunt, Richard C. Keller, Sloan Mahone, Nana Osei Quarshie, Jonathan Sadowsky, Romain Tiquet
  • Cover
  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • Preface
  • Introduction: Madness, the Psychopolitical, and the Vernacular: Rethinking Psychiatric Histories
  • Part I: Writing, Biography, and thePsychopolitics of Decolonization
    • 1. Archives of False Prophets: Inventing the Futurein a West African Psychiatric Hospital
    • 2. Missionary Anxieties,Psychopathology, and Decolonization: A Biographical Approach
    • 3. Mr. Tanka and Voices: A Cameroonian Patient Writing about Schizophrenia
  • Part II: Patient Words Meet Diagnostic Categories
    • 4. Delirious Words and Social Ambition in French Colonial Madagascar
    • 5. Sickness and Symptoms as Cultural Capacities in Colonial Ideology
    • 6. Rethinking Brain Fag Syndrome: Students, Symptoms, and a Late Colonial Survey in Nigeria
  • Part: III Practices and Long Durations
    • 7. Casting out Anger: Stress, Possession, and the Everyday in Taita, Kenya
    • 8. The Universal, the Particular,and Vernacular Resistancein Colonial Algeria
  • Part: IV Unexpected Archives and Ethnographic Investigations
    • 9. Precarious Families, “Danger,” and Psychiatric Internment in 1960s Dakar: An Archive of Kin Letters
    • 10. Lorry Dreams and Slave Ship Disintegrations: Motion, Madness, and Incongruent Planes in History
  • Coda: On the Importance of Suffering
  • Contributors
  • Index
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