Anthropology
Related: About this forumHallucinatory 'voices' shaped by local culture, Stanford anthropologist says
I had missed this article when it came out a few weeks ago; nonetheless, I found the subject truly fascinating.
Stanford Report, July 16, 2014
Hallucinatory 'voices' shaped by local culture, Stanford anthropologist says
Stanford anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann found that voice-hearing experiences of people with serious psychotic disorders are shaped by local culture in the United States, the voices are harsh and threatening; in Africa and India, they are more benign and playful. This may have clinical implications for how to treat people with schizophrenia, she suggests.
By Clifton B. Parker
People suffering from schizophrenia may hear "voices" auditory hallucinations differently depending on their cultural context, according to new Stanford research.
In the United States, the voices are harsher, and in Africa and India, more benign, said Tanya Luhrmann, a Stanford professor of anthropology and first author of the article in the British Journal of Psychiatry.
The experience of hearing voices is complex and varies from person to person, according to Luhrmann. The new research suggests that the voice-hearing experiences are influenced by one's particular social and cultural environment and this may have consequences for treatment.
In an interview, Luhrmann said that American clinicians "sometimes treat the voices heard by people with psychosis as if they are the uninteresting neurological byproducts of disease which should be ignored. Our work found that people with serious psychotic disorder in different cultures have different voice-hearing experiences. That suggests that the way people pay attention to their voices alters what they hear their voices say. That may have clinical implications." ....
Much MORE at http://news.stanford.edu/news/2014/july/voices-culture-luhrmann-071614.html
Arkansas Granny
(31,523 posts)theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)Is there a difference among cultures about how many of these "voices" are attributed to a deity?
theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)It seems that the participants from India and Africa (and the latter particularly so) were more likely to attribute the voices to "god" but in a non-threatening way. The cultural differences between east vs. west reflected by these reactions is distilled to one of "the individual vs the collective".