Department of Anthropology, Harvard University.
Am Psychol. 2021 Dec;76(9):1514-1525. doi: 10.1037/amp0000906.
Early in my career, I explored clinical depression and problem drinking among my own American Indian people on the Fort Belknap Indian reservation in Montana in the United States. There I interviewed a middle-aged cultural traditionalist named Traveling-Thunder who explained why many community members struggled with substance abuse and associated distress. In his view, the primary problem was that "we do not fit in with the Whiteman's system." As it turned out, this straightforward observation captured an entire explanatory rationale about reservation mental health that reappears everywhere I go in "Indian Country." Specifically, Traveling-Thunder highlighted history and spirituality in his account of the emergence of community mental health problems, overtly attributing these forms of disabling distress to processes of Euro American colonization. This problem frame overtly recasts "mental disorders" as (post)colonial pathologies, which anchors a broad alternative Indigenous mental health discourse. This framework is parallel to but distinctive from dominant psychiatric discourse. In this article, I describe this alter-Native psy-ence and trace the implications for American Indian community mental health services. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
在我的职业生涯早期,我曾在美国蒙大拿州贝尔纳普堡印第安保留地(Fort Belknap Indian reservation)研究过美国印第安人当中的临床抑郁症和酗酒问题。在那里,我采访了一位名叫 Traveling-Thunder 的中年文化传统主义者,他解释了为什么许多社区成员都在与药物滥用和相关痛苦作斗争。在他看来,主要问题是“我们与白人的制度格格不入”。事实证明,这个直截了当的观察结果捕捉到了一个关于保留地心理健康的整个解释性基本原理,这个原理在我“印第安人之地”(Indian Country)所到之处都有体现。具体来说,Traveling-Thunder 在他对社区心理健康问题出现的描述中强调了历史和精神性,公开将这些形式的致残性痛苦归因于欧美殖民化的过程。这种问题框架将“精神障碍”公然地重塑为(后)殖民病理学,从而为广泛的替代原住民心理健康话语奠定了基础。这个框架与主流精神病学话语相似但又有所不同。在本文中,我描述了这种替代的“psy-ence”,并探讨了其对美国印第安人社区心理健康服务的影响。(美国心理协会,2022)