The Interface of Mad Studies and Indigenous Ways of Knowing: Innovation, Co-Creation, and Decolonization

IF 1.4 Q2 SOCIAL WORK
A. Dwornik
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper explores the interface between Mad Studies and Indigenous ways of knowing, and argues that the dialogical expanse that exists between these two fields could be a site for innovation, co-creation, and decolonization. Mad Studies is a radical approach to studying the ways we organize and respond to mental health experiences. The field questions and unsettles biomedical understandings of mental illness, and frames psychiatric experiences as diverse forms of human emotional or spiritual expression. Indigenous perspectives on disability describe mental health using a holistic, wellness-based lens, with many scholars highlighting the link to colonial violence and oppression. The interface of Mad Studies and Indigenous ways of knowing could provide a unique platform for gaining a broader understanding of Indigenous mental health while resisting Western, psy explanations of emotional distress. Different interpretations and understandings can be discussed and debated, and through ethical spaces (Ermine, 2007) new understandings or ideas may emerge. These, in turn, may help decolonize some of the dominant biomedical biases that underpin many contemporary psychiatric treatment approaches.Social workers have a particularly important role to play in these conversations. Our professional commitment to anti-oppression and social justice implores us to take an active role in these debates. Through our workplaces we can problematize dominant discourses from within dominant systems, and make our contribution to decolonization.
疯狂研究与本土认知方式的结合:创新、共同创造和非殖民化
本文探讨了疯狂研究和本土认知方式之间的界面,并认为这两个领域之间存在的对话空间可以成为创新、共同创造和去殖民化的场所。疯狂研究是一种激进的方法来研究我们组织和应对心理健康经历的方式。该领域质疑和动摇了对精神疾病的生物医学理解,并将精神病学经历定义为人类情感或精神表达的多种形式。土著居民对残疾的看法是从整体的、以健康为基础的角度来描述心理健康的,许多学者强调残疾与殖民暴力和压迫的联系。疯狂研究和土著认知方式的结合可以提供一个独特的平台,在抵制西方对情绪困扰的心理解释的同时,更广泛地了解土著的心理健康。不同的解释和理解可以讨论和辩论,通过伦理空间(Ermine, 2007),新的理解或想法可能会出现。反过来,这些可能有助于消除一些主导生物医学的偏见,这些偏见支撑着许多当代精神病学治疗方法。社会工作者在这些对话中扮演着特别重要的角色。我们对反压迫和社会正义的专业承诺要求我们在这些辩论中发挥积极作用。通过我们的工作场所,我们可以从主导系统中对主导话语提出问题,并为非殖民化作出贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
25.00%
发文量
52
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