Book contents
- Journey to the Centre of the Self
- Reviews
- Journey to the Centre of the Self
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary
- Part I Contextual Information
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Culture and Psychiatry
- Chapter 2 An Overview of South Asian Migration to the UK
- Chapter 3 An Overview of the Interviews
- Chapter 4 Capturing the Lived Experience
- Chapter 5 The Primacy of the Lived Experience as the Route to Change
- Part II The Interviews
- Part III Analysis
- References
- Index
Chapter 1 - Culture and Psychiatry
from Part I - Contextual Information
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 October 2024
- Journey to the Centre of the Self
- Reviews
- Journey to the Centre of the Self
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary
- Part I Contextual Information
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Culture and Psychiatry
- Chapter 2 An Overview of South Asian Migration to the UK
- Chapter 3 An Overview of the Interviews
- Chapter 4 Capturing the Lived Experience
- Chapter 5 The Primacy of the Lived Experience as the Route to Change
- Part II The Interviews
- Part III Analysis
- References
- Index
Summary
Chapter 1 provides an overview of the field of cultural psychiatry before focusing on the UK context. Salient factors in the national context of cultural psychiatry include the history of imperialism and the impact of postwar migration on the development of a multi-ethnic society. This has necessitated research in the following priority areas: the recognition of the effects of racism and discrimination on mental health, and, relatedly, efforts to achieve services that meet the needs of ethnic minority groups. Current areas of research are outlined before a deeper discussion of two strands that will be explored more widely in the book. These are, in order: the need to recognise more fully cultural hybridity with ethnic minority populations and the perspectives of South Asian psychiatrists within the white spaces of psychiatry and the impact this has on practice. All too often ethnic minority populations, historically within the UK, from non-white ethnicities are clumped together for statistical reasons. This leads to gross oversimplifications that flattens differences. Addressing the complexity of identity in its intersectionality and that too through the interviews with South Asian psychiatrists leads to a more developed understanding about identity, which is necessary in improving mental health services for South Asian patients.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Journey to the Centre of the SelfExploring the Lived Experiences of South Asian Psychiatrists in the UK, pp. 5 - 18Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024