Thesis ID: CBB001567600

Making Healthy Minds and Bodies in Syria and Lebanon, 1899--1961 (2014)

unapi

Tsacoyianis, Beverly Ann (Author)


Washington University in St. Louis
Karamustafa, Ahmet
Berg, Nancy
Karamustafa, Ahmet
Kieval, Hillel
Berg, Nancy
Reynolds, Nancy
Parsons, Timothy
Kieval, Hillel


Publication Date: 2014
Edition Details: Advisor: Reynolds, Nancy, Parsons, Timothy; Committee Members: Karamustafa, Ahmet, Kieval, Hillel, Berg, Nancy.
Physical Details: 275 pp.
Language: English

Psychiatrists in Syria presented mental health treatment to Syrians as more than just a way to control or cure mental illness, but as a modernizing worldview to combat popular ideas about the origins of mental illness. When the Ibn Sina Mental Hospital was founded near Damascus in 1922, staff were careful to strip treatment of religious meaning. While the physicians were trained in French psychiatric methods, they neither attempted "moral healing" nor imposed religious instruction, as at other hospitals in the region such as the Protestant medical missionary-run Asfuriyeh near Beirut. Ibn Sina hospital staff were so careful to present a purely psychiatric framework for illness that they distanced themselves almost completely from vernacular healing. This decision, perhaps ironically, hastened a vernacular-psychiatric division in the medical landscape of the mid-twentieth century where healing systems in other parts of the Middle East had begun to integrate local customs. Treatment devoid of spiritual therapies ultimately delegitimized psychiatry among lower classes. Prior to the 1950s, patients and their families saw little evidence that psychiatry could be as curative for disordered minds as biomedicine appeared to be for diseased bodies. Mental health was one of the few arenas in medical care that left room for other voices to challenge the hegemonic nature of biomedicine and the notion of a medical modernity. Local families saw vernacular healers as more trustworthy in their local ties, familiar healing practices, and separation from colonizers' medical training. For all these reasons, the mental health landscape for Syrians in the early and mid-twentieth century remained open to non-psychiatric alternatives. This research relies in large part on annual reports from Asfuriyeh Hospital, patient case files from Ibn Sina Mental Hospital, medical journals, ethnographic reports from the early and mid-twentieth century, and interviews with Syrian psychiatrists collected between 2008 and 2010.

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 75/08(E), Feb 2015. Proquest Document ID: 1528550981.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567600/

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Authors & Contributors
Silvano, Giovanni
Abi-Rached, Joelle M.
Artières, Philippe
Coleborne, Catharine
Gauchet, Marcel
Heuring, Darcy Hughes
Journals
History of Psychiatry
International Journal of Middle East Studies
Journal of Jesuit Studies
Publishers
Franco Angeli
MIT Press
Indiana University
CNRS Éditions
Fayard
Manchester University Press
Concepts
Psychiatric hospitals
Psychiatry
Public health
Mental disorders and diseases
Medicine
Medicine and politics
People
Pinel, Philippe
Charcot, Jean Martin
Kraepelin, Emil
Taesch, Paul
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
18th century
20th century, early
21st century
Places
France
Lebanon
Syria
Paris (France)
Middle and Near East
Australia
Institutions
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
Salpêtrière, Paris
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