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Suffering and its professional transformation: toward an ethnography of interpersonal experience
- Source :
- Culture, medicine and psychiatry. 15(3)
- Publication Year :
- 1991
-
Abstract
- The authors define experience as an intersubjective medium of microcultural and infrapolitical processes in which something is at stake for participants in local worlds. Experience so defined mediates (and transforms) the relationship between context and person, meaning and psychobiology in health and illness and in healing. Building on this theoretical background, an approach to ethnography is illustrated through an analysis of suffering in Chinese society. The embodied memory of a survivor of serious trauma during the Cultural Revolution provides an example. From there, the authors go on to describe a framework of indigenous Chinese categories for the analysis of experience — mianzi (face), quanxi (connections), renqing (situated emotion), bao (reciprocity). The paper concludes with a discussion of the existential limits of this and other anthropological approaches to the study of experience as moral process.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Male
China
Health (social science)
Morals
Social Environment
Existentialism
Indigenous
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
Situated
Ethnography
Humans
Interpersonal Relations
Social Change
Somatoform Disorders
Physician-Patient Relations
Politics
Sick Role
Social environment
Social Support
General Medicine
Epistemology
Psychiatry and Mental health
Personality Development
Embodied cognition
Anthropology
Sociology of health and illness
Psychology
Phenomenology (psychology)
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 0165005X
- Volume :
- 15
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Culture, medicine and psychiatry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....822f857752d066f6609f5c544a82b8c9