Kiyang-Yang, a West-African Postwar Idiom of Distress

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dc.contributor.author de Jong, Joop T. en_US
dc.contributor.author Reis, Ria en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2011-12-29T23:48:13Z
dc.date.available 2011-12-29T23:48:13Z
dc.date.issued 2010-4-27 en_US
dc.identifier.citation de Jong, Joop T., Ria Reis. "Kiyang-yang, a West-African Postwar Idiom of Distress" Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 34(2): 301-321. (2010) en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1573-076X en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2144/2664
dc.description.abstract In 1984, a healing cult for young barren women in southern Guinea Bissau developed into a movement, Kiyang-yang, that shook society to its foundations and had national repercussions. "Idiom of distress" is used here as a heuristic tool to understand how Kiyang-yang was able to link war and post-war-related traumatic stress and suffering on both individual and group levels. An individual experience born from a traumatic origin may be generalized into an idiom that diverse sectors of society could embrace for a range of related reasons. We argue that, for an idiom to be understood and appropriated by others, there has to be resonance at the level of symbolic language and shared experiences as well as at the level of the culturally mediated contingent emotions it communicates. We also argue that through its symbolic references to structural causes of suffering, an idiom of distress entails a danger for those in power. It can continue to exist only if its etiology is not exposed or the social suffering it articulates is not eliminated. We finally argue that idioms of distress are not to be understood as discrete diagnostic categories or as monodimensional expressions of "trauma" that can be addressed. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Springer US en_US
dc.rights © de Jong and Reis, 2010 en_US
dc.subject Idiom of distress en_US
dc.subject Healing cult en_US
dc.subject Dissociation en_US
dc.subject Traumatic stress en_US
dc.subject Social suffering en_US
dc.subject Central possession religion en_US
dc.subject Clairvoyance en_US
dc.subject Guinea Bissau en_US
dc.subject Kiyang-yang en_US
dc.subject Barrenness en_US
dc.subject Witchcraft en_US
dc.subject Political violence en_US
dc.subject Armed conflict en_US
dc.title Kiyang-Yang, a West-African Postwar Idiom of Distress en_US
dc.type article en_US
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s11013-010-9178-7 en_US
dc.identifier.pubmedid 20422270 en_US
dc.identifier.pmcid 2878590 en_US

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