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Laurence
J. Kirmayer, M.D., FRCPC
James McGill Professor &
Director
Division of Social & Transcultural Psychiatry
McGill University
Canada
My interest in
cultural psychiatry has its roots in my family background. As the
grandson of immigrants who came to Canada in the 1910s escaping pogroms
in Eastern Europe, issues of identity and tradition, racism and justice,
and the riches and pleasures of cultural diversity were the topics of
many conversations while I was growing up. I began my university studies
in physics and mathematics, but discovered I had an aptitude for
psychology and completed my undergraduate degree in physiological
psychology at McGill. Among my teachers and mentors at that time were
Dalbir Bindra, Donald Hebb, and Ronald Melzack. My undergraduate
research was on state-dependent learning with drugs and ACTH in mice and
electrical stimulation of the hippocampus in rats. This early exposure
to research convinced me that empirical psychology could provide a
firmer foundation than psychodynamic theory for psychiatry.
I planned to continue
on to a doctorate in clinical psychology, but was persuaded that medical
training would provide me with a politically more effective platform
from which to address my concerns about the misuse of psychiatric power,
which came from reading R.D. Laing and other writers on
'anti-psychiatry'. During my last year of medical school at McGill, I
took a course on ethnopsychiatry from the medical anthropologist
Margaret Lock, who had just come to McGill after completing her
doctorate at Berkeley. The topic captivated me and it became clear that
this was the direction I wanted to take. I went to the University of
California at Davis for my residency in psychiatry. There I had the good
fortune to meet the anthropologists Byron and Mary-Jo Good, who had just
come from Harvard, where they were colleagues of Arthur Kleinman. With a
consultation-liaison psychiatrist, Henry Herrera, the Goods established
a cultural consultation service at the UC Davis Medical Center, where
patients received evaluations and treatment from a mixed group of
clinicians and healers from the community, including a Puerto Rican
espiritista, Mexican curandera, and an African American Baptist
minister.
I returned to
Montreal in 1980, completed a research fellowship and took a staff
position at the Jewish General Hospital (one of five McGill teaching
hospitals) as a consultation-liaison psychiatrist and researcher. My
early research studies examined somatization in primary care. In a very
fruitful collaboration with Jim Robbins, a medical sociologist now at
the University of Arkansas, we developed an approach to somatization as
illness behavior, with an emphasis on causal attributions and
interpersonal processes.
Soon after my return
to Montreal, I discovered that McGill had a Division of Social and
Transcultural Psychiatry, then headed by Raymond Prince. At his
invitation, I wrote a review article on culture and somatization for the
journal he edited, Transcultural Psychiatric Research Review. I
continued to learn medical anthropology by osmosis in the congenial
company of an evening study group that included Margaret Lock, David
Howes and John Leavitt.
Montreal at that time
was also home to the Interuniversity Group for Research in Medical
Anthropology and Ethnopsychiatry (usually referred to by its French
acronym, GIRAME), founded by Guy Dubreuil of the University of Montreal
and H.B.M. Murphy of McGill. At a time when linguistic tensions in
Montreal ran high, it was an inspiring example of integration, in which
both English and French were used freely, as suited the comfort of the
speaker. With Guy Dubreuil, I took on co-editorship of GIRAME's
bilingual journal, Culture/Santé/Health. My friendship with the
anthropologists Gilles Bibeau (who was Chair of Anthropology at the
University of Montreal) and Ellen Corin dates back to that time, and
they have both been tremendously supportive, stimulating and challenging
colleagues. In the late 1980s, GIRAME and its journal wound down as
other forms of networking and collaboration took their place.
In the early 1980s,
with the help of Margaret Lock, I undertook some brief fieldwork in
Japan, but clinical and family responsibilities sidelined plans to
continue. In 1989, I had the opportunity to do psychiatric consultations
for the Inuit in the arctic region of Quebec and this began an ongoing
involvement in Inuit mental health. Struck by the high suicide rate
among young men, I began a series of epidemiological and ethnographic
studies aimed at understanding the impact of internal colonialism and
culture change on Inuit mental health. This led to a broader interest in
and involvement with the mental health of indigenous peoples and,
eventually, the founding of a National Network for Aboriginal Mental
Health Research, which I co-direct with Dr. Gail Valaskakis, the
Director of Research for the Aboriginal Health Foundation. Currently, I
am leading a cross-national research program on resilience among
Indigenous peoples, with colleagues from New Zealand.
In 1991, Raymond
Prince retired and I took over the direction of the Division and
editorship of the journal. Transcultural Psychiatric Research Review was
the oldest journal in the field, but because it published mainly
abstracts and reviews of other articles, did not have much visibility
outside its circle of devoted readers. I was mandated to make over the
journal as a peer-reviewed publication and arranged to move from
in-house publication to an arrangement with Sage (UK), a leading
publisher of social science and other journals. This arrangement has
allowed the journal to grow and to become an arena for current research
work in cultural psychiatry. We remain committed to maintaining its
diversity both in terms of the geographic origins of contributors and
the many disciplines represented. As an international journal that cuts
across psychiatry, psychology, anthropology and other social sciences,
Transcultural Psychiatry occupies a unique interdisciplinary niche.
Since the early
1990s, my thinking about culture and psychiatry has been strongly
influenced by ongoing conversations with the medical anthropologist
Allan Young, whose critique of the cultural construction of PTSD has
provided a model for the careful ethnographic, historical and
philosophical analysis of psychiatric research and practice. My clinical
perspective owes much to my colleagues Jaswant Guzder and Cécile
Rousseau. I feel extremely fortunate to have such innovative and
committed scholars and clinicians as friends and colleagues. In addition
to continuing work on Aboriginal mental health, healing and resilience,
I am engaged in a range of other projects on models of mental health
services for multicultural societies, the use of the cultural
formulation in cultural consultation, the conceptual integration of
cultural and social neuroscience research, and the role of metaphor in
illness and healing. At the center of my work in cultural psychiatry are
two fundamental concerns: the power of poetic language to transform
experience and the politics of empathy and alterity in clinical
practice.
E-mail: laurence.kirmayer@mcgill.ca
October 5, 2006
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