Akyeampong E
Department of History, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Cult Med Psychiatry. 1995 Jun;19(2):261-80. doi: 10.1007/BF01379414.
A vast literature has accumulated in recent years, examining the disease concept of alcoholism, and analyzing the interaction of biomedicine with indigenous healing systems in colonial and post-colonial societies. Social scientists have consistently emphasized the social context of alcoholism, although their works have been largely ignored. This article engages the literature on the social history of medicine in Africa, and works on alcohol use in non-Western societies, in an attempt to offer an understanding of alcoholism in Ghana rooted in Ghanaian cultures and history. It explores how alcohol's established ties with spirituality influences Ghanaian perceptions of alcoholism. Based on interviews, highlife music, popular literature, and the few written works on alcohol use in Ghana, the article examines the social construction of the alcoholic in independent Ghana.
近年来积累了大量文献,探讨酒精中毒的疾病概念,并分析殖民和后殖民社会中生物医学与本土治疗体系的相互作用。社会科学家一直强调酒精中毒的社会背景,尽管他们的著作在很大程度上被忽视了。本文结合了关于非洲医学社会史的文献以及关于非西方社会酒精使用的研究,试图从加纳文化和历史的角度理解加纳的酒精中毒现象。它探讨了酒精与灵性的既定联系如何影响加纳人对酒精中毒的认知。基于访谈、高地生活音乐、通俗文学以及加纳少数关于酒精使用的书面作品,本文考察了独立加纳社会中酗酒者的社会建构。