Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T07:16:38.975Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Psychiatric Diagnosis in a Transcultural Setting: The Importance of Lexical Categories

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Rodney Morice*
Affiliation:
The Flinders University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia

Summary

In a transcultural setting, psychiatric diagnosis is often impeded by language and cultural barriers. A greater reliance on observed or reported behaviour than on the self-reporting of subjective discomfort may thus be expected, and this could result in the low prevalence of reported anxiety and depression in many transcultural psychiatric surveys. The language of the Pintupi Aborigines of Central Australia, until recently palaeolithic hunter-gatherers, is seen to contain lexical categories for anxiety and depression. This attests not only to their capacity to experience such affects, but also to their ability to express them verbally. The implications of this finding for psychiatric diagnosis are discussed.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1978 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Benedict, P. K. & Jacks, I. (1954) Mental illness in primitive societies. Psychiatry, 17, 377–99.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bernstein, B. (1958) Some sociological determinants of perception. British Journal of Sociology, 9, 159–74.Google Scholar
Brown, R. W. & Lenneberg, E. G. (1961) A study in language and cognition. In Psycholinguistics (ed. Saporta, S.). New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston Google Scholar
Carnegie, D. W. (1898) Spinifex and Sand. Harmondsworth: Penguin (1973).Google Scholar
Carstairs, G. M. & Kapur, R. L. (1976) The Great Universe of Kota: Change and Mental Disorder in an Indian Village. London: The Hogarth Press.Google Scholar
Cawte, J. E. (1972) Cruel, Poor and Brutal Nations. Honolulu: The University Press of Hawaii.Google Scholar
Cawte, J. E. & Kiloh, L. G. (1967) Language and pictorial representation in Aboriginal children. Social Science and Medicine, 1, 6776.Google Scholar
Collomb, H. (1967) Methodological problems in cross-cultural research. International Journal of Psychiatry, 3(1), 1719.Google Scholar
Evans, E. C. & Long, J. P. M. (1965) The Aborigines of Western Central Australia. Geographical Journal, 131, 318–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Field, M. J. (1960) Search for Security: An Ethnopsychiatric Study of Rural Ghana. London: Faber.Google Scholar
Flinders, M. (1814) A Voyage to Terra Australis. Adelaide: Libraries Board of South Australia (1966).Google Scholar
Frazer, J. G. (1922) The Golden Bough. London: Macmillan (1963).Google Scholar
Freud, S. (1950) Totem and Taboo (trans. Strachey, J.). New York: Norton Google Scholar
Gumperz, J. (1968) The speech community. In Language and Social Context (ed. Giglioli, P.). Harmondsworth: Penguin (1972).Google Scholar
Hansen, K. C. & Hansen, L. E. (1974) Pintupi Dictionary. Darwin: Summer Institute of Linguistics.Google Scholar
Hartwig, M. C. (1972) Aborigines and racism; an historical perspective. In Racism, The Australian Experience (ed. Stevens, F. S.). Sydney: Australian and New Zealand Book Co Google Scholar
Jones, I. H. (1972) Psychiatric disorders among Aborigines of the Australian Western Desert (ii). Social Science and Medicine, 6, 263–7.Google Scholar
Jones, I. H. & Horne, D.J. (1973) Psychiatric disorders among Aborigines of the Australian Western Desert. Social Science and Medicine, 7, 219–28.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leighton, A. H., Lambo, T. A., Hughes, C. C., Leighton, D. C., Murphy, J. M. & Macklin, D. B. (1963) Psychiatric Disorder Among the Yoruba. New York: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Lewis, A. (1967) Problems presented by the ambiguous word ‘anxiety’ as used in psychopathology. Israel Annals of Psychiatry and Related Disciplines, 5(2), 105–21.Google Scholar
Long, J. P. M. (1964a) The Pintubi patrols: welfare work with desert Aborigines. Australian Territories, 4(5), 43–8.Google Scholar
Long, J. P. M. (1964b) The Pintubi patrols; welfare work with desert Aborigines—the later phases. Australian Territories, 4(6), 2435.Google Scholar
Long, J. P. M. (1971) Arid region Aborigines: the Pintubi. In Aboriginal Man and Environment in Australia (eds Mulvaney, D. J. and Golson, J.). Canberra: Australian National University Press Google Scholar
Morice, R. D. (1976) Woman dancing dreaming: psychosocial benefits of the Aboriginal outstation movement. Medical Journal of Australia, 2, 939–42.Google Scholar
Morice, R. D. (1977) The Language of Psychiatry of a Preliterate Group. Unpublished M.D. thesis submitted to the University of New South Wales.Google Scholar
Murphy, H. B. M., Wittkower, E. D. & Chance, N. A. (1964) Cross-cultural inquiry into the symptomatology of depression. Transcultural Psychiatric Research, 1, 521.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nemiah, J. A. (1974) Anxiety: signal, symptom and syndrome. In American Handbook of Psychiatry, vol 3 (eds Arieti, S. and Brody, E. B.). New York: Basic Books Google Scholar
Price, J. S. (1967) The dominance hierarchy and the evolution of mental illness. Lancet, iii, 29 July, 243–6.Google Scholar
Schachter, S. (1965) A cognitive-physiological view of emotion. In Perspectives in Social Psychology (eds Klineberg, O. and Christie, R.). New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston Google Scholar
Schachter, S. & Singer, J. (1962) Cognitive, social and physiological determinants of emotional state. Psychology Review, 69, 378–99.Google Scholar
Spencer, B. & Gillen, F. J. (1899) The Native Tribes of Central Australia. New York: Dover (1968).Google Scholar
Van Lawick-Goodall, J. (1971) In the Shadow of Man. London: Collins.Google Scholar
Wing, J. K., Cooper, J. E. & Sartorius, N. (1974) The Measurement and Classification of Psychiatric Symptoms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Wittkower, E. D. & Rin, H. (1965) Transcultural psychiatry. Archives of General Psychiatry, 13, 387–94.Google Scholar
Yap, P. M. (1974) Comparative Psychiatry (eds Lau, M. P. and Stokes, A. B.). Toronto: University of Toronto Press Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.