ABSTRACT

This volume explores culture-bound syndromes, defined as a pattern of symptoms (mental, physical, and/or relational) experienced only by members of a specific cultural group and recognized as a disorder by members of those groups, and their coverage in popular culture.

Encompassing a wide range of popular culture genres and mediums – from film and TV to literature, graphic novels, and anime – the chapters offer a dynamic mix of approaches to analyze how popular culture has engaged with specific culture-bound syndromes such as hwabyung, hikikomori, taijin kyofusho, zou huo ru mo, sati, amok, Cuban hysteria, voodoo death, and others.

Spanning a global and interdisciplinary remit, this first-of-its-kind anthology will allow scholars and students of popular culture, media and film studies, comparative literature, medical humanities, cultural psychiatry, and philosophy to explore simultaneously a diversity of popular cultures and culturally rooted mental health disorders.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Towards a New Research Paradigm in Popular Culture

part I|63 pages

East Asia

chapter 1|20 pages

When Repressed Anger Fights Back

Hwabyung in Korean Popular Culture

chapter 2|23 pages

Human Encaged

Hikikomori and Taijin Kyofusho in Japanese Popular Culture

chapter 3|18 pages

A Qigong-Induced Mental Disorder

Zou Huo Ru Mo in Chinese Popular Culture

part II|100 pages

India and Southeast Asia

chapter 4|23 pages

Cultural Syndromes in India

Understanding Widow Burning in Sati and Jauhar through Indian Literature

chapter 5|18 pages

The Yakshi Syndrome in Indian Popular Culture

Representation of Possessed Female Bodies in Indian Cinema

chapter 6|21 pages

Seeking the Maternal Uncle

A Study of the Culture-Bound Syndrome Known as Nihu in the Karbis

chapter 7|19 pages

Old but Still Going Strong

Don Khong in Thai Popular Culture

chapter 8|17 pages

Rethinking Amok

Indigenous Identity Affirmation in Malay Legends of Southeast Asia

part III|84 pages

America and Native American Culture

chapter 9|20 pages

The Next Frame Could Be My Redemption

Signature Wounds and Tunnel-Vision Haunt War-Themed Cultural Artifacts

chapter 10|21 pages

Wendigo Psychosis

From Colonial Fabrication to Popular Culture Appropriations and Indigenous Reclamations

chapter 11|19 pages

Cuban Hysteria

Tracing the Invention of a Culture-Bound Syndrome (1798–1830)

chapter 12|22 pages

Digital Culture-Bound Syndromes

A Sociocultural Perspective on Human-Technology Interaction, Mental Health, and Communication

part IV|49 pages

Africa and the Middle East

chapter 13|17 pages

To Kill or to Resurrect

Screening the Agency of Voodoo Priests, Sorcerers and Men of God in Cameroonian and Nigerian Films

chapter 14|15 pages

Belief in the Existence of the Jinn as a Cultural Syndrome

The Case of Sadeq Hedayat's Fiction

chapter 15|15 pages

Ghostly Environments

Faru Rab and the Transnational in Atlantics (2019)