Sociosomatic theory in Vietnamese immigrants' narratives of distress
- 1 August 2004
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Anthropology & Medicine
- Vol. 11 (2) , 117-133
- https://doi.org/10.1080/13648470410001678631
Abstract
We examined the symptom experience and illness explanations of Vietnamese immigrants to Canada through narratives collected during a study of pathways and barriers to mental health care. The narratives presented two culture-related explanatory models: phong thâp and uâ't u'ć. Common elements in the narratives of those who suffered from uâ't u'ć were experiences of injustice and indignation, along with the persistent inability to denounce these injustices because of the sufferer's social status. In contrast, phong thâp - an explanation analogous to rheumatism - was a socially acceptable way to describe distress that was attributed to depletion of energy, cold and environmental effects. Talk about phong thâp also served as an idiom of distress that permitted older people to express negative feelings about their life situation in Canada in a socially acceptable way. The contrast between these models throws into relief the complex interaction of explanatory models and idioms of distress in the co-construction of narratives of distress.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- `Hit by the Wind' and Temperature-Shift Panic among Vietnamese RefugeesTranscultural Psychiatry, 2003
- Panic disorder among Vietnamese refugees attending a psychiatric clinic: prevalence and subtypesGeneral Hospital Psychiatry, 2001
- Narrative illness and the bodyAnthropology & Medicine, 2000
- Short stories about stroke: Interviews and narrative productionAnthropology & Medicine, 2000
- Forming a story: The health benefits of narrativeJournal of Clinical Psychology, 1999
- An Overview of Indigenous Descriptions of Mental Phenomena and the Range of Traditional Healing Practices Amongst the VietnameseTranscultural Psychiatry, 1999
- Culture and SomatizationPsychosomatic Medicine, 1998
- Cultural variations in the response to psychiatric disorders and emotional distressSocial Science & Medicine, 1989
- Depression and somatization: a reviewThe American Journal of Medicine, 1982
- When rational men fall sick: An inquiry into some assumptions made by medical anthropologistsCulture, Medicine, and Psychiatry, 1981