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A Different Medicine

A Different Medicine

Postcolonial Healing in the Native American Church

9780199927845
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Description
Drawing on two years of ethnographic field research among the Navajos, this book explores a controversial Native American ritual and healthcare practice:: ceremonial consumption of the psychedelic Peyote cactus in the context of an indigenous postcolonial healing movement called the Native American Church (NAC), which arose in the 19th century in response to the creation of the reservations system and increasing societal ills, including alcoholism. The movement is the locus ofcultural conflict with a long history in North America, and stirs very strong and often opposed emotions and moral interpretations. Joseph Calabrese describes the Peyote Ceremony as it is used in family contexts and federally funded clinical programs for Native American patients. He uses aninterdisciplinary methodology that he calls clinical ethnography:: an approach to research that involves clinically informed and self-reflective immersion in local worlds of suffering, healing, and normality. Calabrese combined immersive fieldwork among NAC members in their communities with a year of clinical work at a Navajo-run treatment program for adolescents with severe substance abuse and associated mental health problems. There he had the unique opportunity to provide conventionaltherapeutic intervention alongside Native American therapists who were treating the very problems that the NAC often addresses through ritual. Calabrese argues that if people respond better to clinical interventions that are relevant to their societys unique cultural adaptations and ideologies (as seemsto be the case with the NAC), then preventing ethnic minorities from accessing traditional ritual forms of healing may actually constitute a human rights violation.
Product Details
OUP USA
83293
9780199927845
9780199927845

Data sheet

Publication date
2013
Issue number
1
Cover
paperback
Pages count
254
Dimensions (mm)
156 x 235
Weight (g)
386
  • Acknowledgments; Preface: Hard to Swallow: The Challenge of Radical Cultural Differences; PART 1. Anthropological and Clinical Orientations; I Introduction: Peyote, Cultural Paradigm Clash, and the Multiplicity of the Normal; II Expanding Our Conceptualization of the Therapeutic: Toward a Suitable Theoretical Framework for the Study of Cultural Psychiatries; III Clinical Ethnography: Clinically-Informed Self-Reflective Immersion in Local Worlds of Suffering, Healing and Wellbeing; PART 2. Cultural and Personal Healing in the Native American Church; IV The Unfolding Cultural Paradigm Clash: Ritual Peyote Use and the Struggle for Postcolonial Healing in North America; V Medicine and Spirit: The Dual Nature of Peyote; VI The Peyote Ceremony: Psychopharmacology, Ritual Process, and Experiences of Healing; VII Kinship, Socialization, and Ritual in Navajo Peyotist Families; VIII Postcolonial Hybridity and Ritual Bureaucracy in New Mexico: Participant Observation in a Navajo Peyotist Healers Clinical Program; IX Decolonizing Our Understandings of the Normal and the Therapeutic; References;
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