Yen Jeffery
Department of Psychology.
Hist Psychol. 2016 May;19(2):77-92. doi: 10.1037/hop0000025. Epub 2016 Feb 15.
As part of a growing literature on the histories of psychology in the Global South, this article outlines some historical developments in South African psychologists' engagement with the problem of "health." Alongside movements to formalize and professionalize a U.S.-style "health psychology" in the 1990s, there arose a parallel, eclectic, and more or less critical psychology that contested the meaning and determinants of health, transgressed disciplinary boundaries, and opposed the responsibilization of illness implicit in much health psychological theorizing and neoliberal discourse. This disciplinary bifurcation characterized South African work well into the postapartheid era, but ideological distinctions have receded in recent years under a new regime of knowledge production in thrall to the demands of the global market. The article outlines some of the historical-political roots of key trends in psychologists' work on health in South Africa, examining the conditions that have impinged on its directions and priorities. It raises questions about the future trajectories of psychological research on health after 20 years of democracy, and argues that there currently is no "health psychology" in South Africa, and that the discipline is the better for it.
作为关于全球南方心理学史的不断增长的文献的一部分,本文概述了南非心理学家在应对“健康”问题方面的一些历史发展。在20世纪90年代将美国式“健康心理学”正规化和专业化的运动之外,还出现了一种平行的、折衷的且或多或少具有批判性的心理学,它对健康的意义和决定因素提出质疑,跨越学科界限,并反对许多健康心理学理论化和新自由主义话语中隐含的疾病责任化。这种学科分歧在南非一直持续到后种族隔离时代,但近年来,在受全球市场需求束缚的新的知识生产体制下,意识形态上的差异已经消退。本文概述了南非心理学家健康研究关键趋势的一些历史政治根源,审视了影响其方向和重点的条件。它提出了关于民主20年后健康心理学研究未来轨迹的问题,并认为南非目前不存在“健康心理学”,而该学科正因如此而更具优势。