Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 4 de 4
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Int J Soc Psychiatry ; 70(1): 80-86, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37843025

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: This contribution responds to three articles (we refer to all three as 'editorials') concerning something called 'geopsychiatry'. AIMS: To evaluate claims made in these editorials for 'geopsychiatry' as a new field of inquiry at the interface between geography and psychiatry. METHOD: Close critical reading of two editorials in the International Journal of Social Psychiatry - entitled 'Geographical determinants of mental health' and 'Political determinants of mental health' - and one in the International Review of Psychiatry - entitled 'What is geopsychiatry?' RESULTS: While this geopsychiatry initiative is to be applauded, disquiet can be expressed about the almost complete neglect of a pre-existing domain of inquiry - 'mental health geography' or 'the geography of mental health' - that has long been researched by academic geographers and cognate scholars. Key trajectories in this field can be identified and related to the proposed foci for geopsychiatry. CONCLUSIONS: The hope is voiced that future developments in geopsychiatry will proceed in dialogue with the literature and practitioners of mental health geography.


Subject(s)
Mental Health , Psychiatry , Humans , Geography
2.
Transcult Psychiatry ; 57(6): 727-740, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33234074

ABSTRACT

This article introduces the special issue of Transcultural Psychiatry entitled "Other Psychotherapies": Healing Interactions across Time, Geographies, and Cultures. This special issue is intended to highlight that, rather than being exclusively a modern phenomenon, variants of psychotherapeutic practice have existed for millennia in diverse sociocultural contexts. This article explores the historical development of Western psychotherapy and points to the important contribution that Greco-Roman scholars from antiquity made to contemporary understandings of mental states and emotional wellbeing. The ways in which healing interactions have been localized to reflect the local cultural and geographic contexts are also highlighted through a discussion of recent work in psychotherapeutic geographies. This allows us to identify commonalities and differences between various forms of psychotherapy. We also consider how particular subcultures may influence the future development of psychotherapy. This article serves to foreshadow the themes that are explored in more detail in the collection of articles that make up the "Other Psychotherapies" special issue. The various articles that contribute to the special issue are introduced, and the key issues explored by these articles briefly highlighted. The intention of the special issue is to facilitate an opportunity to appreciate the ways in which psychotherapies are a product of the epoch, setting, and institutions that shape people's lives.


Subject(s)
Culture , Geography , Psychotherapy , Ethnopsychology , Humans , Mental Disorders/therapy
3.
Hist Psychiatry ; 28(1): 58-71, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27834293

ABSTRACT

This paper uses the unique collection of Scottish outsider art, labelled Art Extraordinary, as a window into the often neglected small spaces of asylum care in the early twentieth century. By drawing upon materials from the Art Extraordinary collection and its associated archives, this paper demonstrates the importance of incorporating small and everyday spaces of care - such as gardens, paths, studios and boats - into the broader historical narratives of psychiatric care in Scotland. Examples of experiential memorialization and counterpoints to asylum surveillance culture will be illuminated. The significance of using 'outsider' art collections as a valuable source in tracing geographical histories will be highlighted.


Subject(s)
Art Therapy/history , Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , Mental Disorders/history , Mental Disorders/therapy , History, 20th Century , Humans , Scotland
4.
Hist Psychiatry ; 25(3): 283-98, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25114145

ABSTRACT

In conjunction with the recent critical assessments of the life and work of R.D. Laing, this paper seeks to demonstrate what is revealed when Laing's work on families and created spaces of mental health care are examined through a geographical lens. The paper begins with an exploration of Laing's time at the Tavistock Clinic in London during the 1960s, and of the co-authored text with Aaron Esterson entitled, Sanity, Madness and the Family (1964). The study then seeks to demonstrate the importance Laing and his colleague placed on the time-space situatedness of patients and their worlds. Finally, an account is provided of Laing's and Esterson's spatial thinking in relation to their creation of both real and imagined spaces of therapeutic care.


Subject(s)
Mental Health Services/history , Psychiatry/history , Schizophrenia/history , Ambulatory Care Facilities/history , Female , History, 20th Century , Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , Humans , London , Mental Disorders/history , Mental Disorders/therapy , Schizophrenia/therapy , Scotland
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...