Roggenkamp Hannah, Nicholls Andrew, Pierre Joseph M
Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, VA Puget Sound Healthcare System, Seattle, WA 98108, United States.
VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles, CA 90073, United States.
World J Psychiatry. 2017 Sep 22;7(3):148-158. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v7.i3.148.
Tattooing the skin as a means of personal expression is a ritualized practice that has been around for centuries across many different cultures. Accordingly, the symbolic meaning of tattoos has evolved over time and is highly individualized, from both the internal perspective of the wearer and the external perspective of an observer. Within modern Western societies through the 1970s, tattoos represented a cultural taboo, typically associated with those outside of the mainstream such as soldiers, incarcerated criminals, gang members, and others belonging to marginalized and counter-cultural groups. This paper aims to review the more recent epidemiology of tattoos in Western culture in order to establish that tattooing has become a mainstream phenomenon. We then review psychological and psychiatric aspects of tattoos, with a goal of revising outmoded stigmas about tattooing and helping clinicians working with tattooed patients to facilitate an exploration of the personal meaning of skin art and self-identity. We suggest that as a kind of augmentation of the physical exam, looking at and talking to patients about their tattoos can provide a valuable window into the psyche, informing clinical practice.
纹身作为一种个人表达方式,是一种仪式化的行为,在许多不同文化中已存在了数百年。因此,纹身的象征意义随着时间的推移而演变,并且从佩戴者的内在视角和观察者的外在视角来看都具有高度的个体性。在20世纪70年代之前的现代西方社会,纹身代表着一种文化禁忌,通常与主流群体之外的人相关联,比如士兵、被监禁的罪犯、帮派成员以及其他属于边缘化和反文化群体的人。本文旨在回顾西方文化中纹身的最新流行病学情况,以证实纹身已成为一种主流现象。然后我们将回顾纹身的心理和精神层面,目的是修正关于纹身的过时污名,并帮助治疗有纹身患者的临床医生促进对皮肤艺术的个人意义和自我认同的探索。我们认为,作为体格检查的一种补充方式,观察并与患者谈论他们的纹身能够为了解其心理提供一个有价值的窗口,从而为临床实践提供信息。