Chasing dön spirits in Tibetan medical encounters: Transcultural affordances and embodied psychiatry in Amdo, Qinghai

Author:

Tidwell Tawni L.1ORCID,Nianggajia 2,Fjeld Heidi E.3

Affiliation:

1. Center for Healthy Minds, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA

2. Qinghai Nationalities University, Xining, China

3. Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

Abstract

Although spirit possession is generally considered a psychiatric illness, the class of conditions designated as dön (Tib. gdon, “afflictive external influences,” often glossed as “spirit affliction”) in Tibetan medicine represents a distinctive paradigm for an etiology where physical and mental facets inhere in every illness. This study draws upon ethnographic fieldwork in eastern Tibet to examine two conditions that represent illness presentations at both ends of the dön spectrum: one that maps onto a biomedical etiology of stroke and another that presents in a way similar to schizophrenia. The case studies illuminate the forms of harmful external influences that (1) have physiological and psychological impacts that present as symptoms and (2) contribute to a pathogenesis common to both conditions. Our analysis considers the dual role of cultural affordances and bio-looping in the cultural presentation of the two conditions, as well as how the Tibetan medical tradition draws upon cultural, social, biological, and psychological determinants to understand this class of conditions. We also explore the implications the dön illness category has for biomedically oriented paradigms through the way in which it accounts for cultural models for both diagnosis and treatment of several chronic inflammatory conditions that have significant concomitant mental health presentations.

Funder

Network for University Cooperation Tibet-Norway

University of Wisconsin-Madison, Center for Healthy Minds

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Health (social science)

Reference102 articles.

1. Psychologic Processes and Ischemic Stroke (Occlusive Cerebrovascular Disease)

2. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders

3. Bailey C. (2012). The raven and the serpent: “The great all-pervading Rāhula” – Daemonic Buddhism in India and Tibet [PhD thesis, Florida State University].

4. Restrictions and Their Anomalies: The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in Tibet

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