Description

Book Synopsis
Some of the most innovative and provocative work on the emotions and illness is occurring in cross-cultural research on depression. This book 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.

Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction: Culture and Depression
Arthur Kleinman and Byron Good

Part I. MEANINGS, RELATIONSHIPS, SOCIAL AFFECTS:
HISTORICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL
PERSPECTIVES ON DEPRESSION
Introduction to Part I

1. Acedia the Sin and Its Relationship to Sorrow and Melancholia
Stanley W. Jackson

2. Depression and the Translation of Emotional Worlds
Catherine Lutz

3. The Cultural Analysis of Depressive Affect: An Example from New Guinea
Edward L. Schieffelin

4. Depression, Buddhism, and the Work of Culture in Sri Lanka
Gananath Obeyesekere

5. The Interpretive Basis of Depression
Charles F. Keyes

Part II DEPRESSIVE COGNITION, COMMUNICATION, AND BEHAVIOR
Introduction to Part

6.Menstrual Pollution, Soul Loss, and the Comparative Study of Emotions
Richard A. Shweder

7. Dimensions of Dysphoria: The View from Linguistic Anthropology
William 0. Beeman

8. The Theoretical Implications of Converging Research on Depression and the
Culture-Bound Syndromes
John E. Carr and Peter P. Vitaliano

Part III EPIDEMIOLOGICAL MEASUREMENT OF DEPRESSNE DISORDERS CROSS-CULTURALLY
Introduction to Part III

9. A Study of Depression among Traditional Africans, Urban North Americans,
and Southeast Asian Refugees
Morton Beiser

10. Cross-Cultural Studies of Depressive Disorders: An Overview
Anthony J. Marsella, Norman Sartorius,
Assen Jablensky, and Fred R. Fenton

Part IV INTEGRATIONS: ANTHROPOLOGICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRIC ANTHROPOLOGY
OF DEPRESSWE DISORDERS
Introduction to Part IV

11. The Depressive Experience in American Indian Communities:
A Challenge for Psychiatric Theory and Diagnosis
Spero M. Manson, James H. Shore,
and Joseph D. Bloom

12. The Interpretation of Iranian Depressive Illness and Dysphoric Affect
Byron J. Good, Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good,
and Robert Moradi

13. Somatization: The Interconnections in Chinese Society among Culture,
Depressive Experiences, and the Meanings of Pain
Arthur Kleinman and Joan Kleinman

Epilogue: Culture and Depression
Byron Good and Arthur Kleinman

Contributors
Indexes
Author Index
Subject Index

Culture and Depression

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      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 19/08/1986
      ISBN13: 9780520058835, 978-0520058835
      ISBN10: 0520058836
      Also in:
      Anthropology

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Some of the most innovative and provocative work on the emotions and illness is occurring in cross-cultural research on depression. This book 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.

      Table of Contents
      Preface
      Introduction: Culture and Depression
      Arthur Kleinman and Byron Good

      Part I. MEANINGS, RELATIONSHIPS, SOCIAL AFFECTS:
      HISTORICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL
      PERSPECTIVES ON DEPRESSION
      Introduction to Part I

      1. Acedia the Sin and Its Relationship to Sorrow and Melancholia
      Stanley W. Jackson

      2. Depression and the Translation of Emotional Worlds
      Catherine Lutz

      3. The Cultural Analysis of Depressive Affect: An Example from New Guinea
      Edward L. Schieffelin

      4. Depression, Buddhism, and the Work of Culture in Sri Lanka
      Gananath Obeyesekere

      5. The Interpretive Basis of Depression
      Charles F. Keyes

      Part II DEPRESSIVE COGNITION, COMMUNICATION, AND BEHAVIOR
      Introduction to Part

      6.Menstrual Pollution, Soul Loss, and the Comparative Study of Emotions
      Richard A. Shweder

      7. Dimensions of Dysphoria: The View from Linguistic Anthropology
      William 0. Beeman

      8. The Theoretical Implications of Converging Research on Depression and the
      Culture-Bound Syndromes
      John E. Carr and Peter P. Vitaliano

      Part III EPIDEMIOLOGICAL MEASUREMENT OF DEPRESSNE DISORDERS CROSS-CULTURALLY
      Introduction to Part III

      9. A Study of Depression among Traditional Africans, Urban North Americans,
      and Southeast Asian Refugees
      Morton Beiser

      10. Cross-Cultural Studies of Depressive Disorders: An Overview
      Anthony J. Marsella, Norman Sartorius,
      Assen Jablensky, and Fred R. Fenton

      Part IV INTEGRATIONS: ANTHROPOLOGICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRIC ANTHROPOLOGY
      OF DEPRESSWE DISORDERS
      Introduction to Part IV

      11. The Depressive Experience in American Indian Communities:
      A Challenge for Psychiatric Theory and Diagnosis
      Spero M. Manson, James H. Shore,
      and Joseph D. Bloom

      12. The Interpretation of Iranian Depressive Illness and Dysphoric Affect
      Byron J. Good, Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good,
      and Robert Moradi

      13. Somatization: The Interconnections in Chinese Society among Culture,
      Depressive Experiences, and the Meanings of Pain
      Arthur Kleinman and Joan Kleinman

      Epilogue: Culture and Depression
      Byron Good and Arthur Kleinman

      Contributors
      Indexes
      Author Index
      Subject Index

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