Anthropology 311 - Culture & Mental Health

Fall
2021
01
4.00
Felicity Aulino

M 01:30PM-04:00PM

Amherst College
ANTH-311-01-2122F
WEBS 220
faulino@amherst.edu

Are psychiatric disease categories and treatment protocols universally applicable? How can we come to understand the lived experience of mental illness and abnormality? And how can we trace the roots of such experience – whether through brain circuitry, cultural practices, forms of power, or otherwise? In this course, we will draw on psychological anthropology, cultural psychiatry, science studies, and decolonizing methodologies to examine mental health and illness in terms of subjective experience, social processes, and knowledge production. Our goal will be to recognize the centrality of the social world as a force that defines and drives the incidence, occurrence, and course of mental illness, as well as to appreciate the complex relationship between professional and personal accounts of disorder.

Limited to 18 students. Fall semester. Five College Assistant Professor Aulino.

Permission is required for interchange registration during all registration periods.