

Author: Halliburton Murphy
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
ISSN: 0165-005X
Source: Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, Vol.27, Iss.2, 2003-06, pp. : 161-186
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Abstract
This paper considers the significance of the positive and negative aesthetic qualities of different therapies—in other words, how “pleasant” (a term that is elaborated in the paper) it is to undergo various treatments. Interviews were conducted with patients undergoing three forms of healing for mental illness and related problems in the state of Kerala in southern India—ayurvedic (indigenous) psychiatry, allopathic (biomedical) psychiatry, and religious healing. Informants revealed concerns about the aesthetic process of therapy, reporting adverse reactions to allopathic treatments and in some cases asserting that they enjoyed ayurvedic procedures. Some informants with long-term illnesses had chosen to live in the process of therapy and reside indefinitely in the aesthetically engaging environment of a mosque, temple, or church after pursuing medical therapies for years. Thus considerations of the quality of the process of therapy also call for an examination of the limitations of the concept of “cure” for describing what is accomplished in healing in some therapeutic settings.
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