Identified Patient: Apartheid Syndrome, Political Therapeutics, and Generational Care in South Africa.

Journal: Medical anthropology quarterly

Volume: 34

Issue: 2

Year of Publication: 2021

Affiliated Institutions:  Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis.

Abstract summary 

In contemporary South Africa, racism, economic exclusion, and spatial segregation remain trenchant features of everyday life 25 years after the end of apartheid. In this article, I show how therapeutic practices by black South Africans in one of the country's largest townships address the ongoing legacies of this history. Rather than treat individual psyches, therapists' practices are oriented toward the relational space between generations, a political therapeutic driven by the affective force of the therapists' own history of struggle toward a different future for black youth, who continue to be marked by the legacies of colonialism and apartheid. In the process, I track how this political therapeutic confronts the normative demands of psychiatric knowledge. Overall, I argue that rather than solely focusing on the violence of care in clinical settings, we should interrogate political generation and embodied history as forms of expertise and their constitutive potentialities.

Authors & Co-authors:  McIsaac Stephen S

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Allwood, C. 1997. Psychiatry in South Africa-Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. South African Medical Journal 87: 1728-31.
Authors :  1
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1111/maq.12542
SSN : 0745-5194
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Anthropology, Medical
Other Terms
South Africa;care;history;mental health;violence
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
South Africa
Publication Country
United States