Psychological anthropology is an interdisciplinary subfield of
anthropology
Anthropology is the scientific study of humanity, concerned with human behavior, human biology, cultures, society, societies, and linguistics, in both the present and past, including archaic humans. Social anthropology studies patterns of behav ...
that studies the interaction of
cultural
Culture ( ) is a concept that encompasses the social behavior, institutions, and Social norm, norms found in human societies, as well as the knowledge, beliefs, arts, laws, Social norm, customs, capabilities, Attitude (psychology), attitudes ...
and
mental processes
Cognition is the "mental action or process of acquiring knowledge and understanding through thought, experience, and the senses". It encompasses all aspects of intellectual functions and processes such as: perception, attention, thought, i ...
. This subfield tends to focus on ways in which humans' development and
enculturation
Enculturation is the process by which people learn the dynamics of their surrounding culture and acquire values and norms appropriate or necessary to that culture and its worldviews.
Definition and history of research
The term enculturation ...
within a particular cultural group—with its own history, language, practices, and conceptual categories—shape processes of human
cognition
Cognition is the "mental action or process of acquiring knowledge and understanding through thought, experience, and the senses". It encompasses all aspects of intellectual functions and processes such as: perception, attention, thought, ...
,
emotion
Emotions are physical and mental states brought on by neurophysiology, neurophysiological changes, variously associated with thoughts, feelings, behavior, behavioral responses, and a degree of pleasure or suffering, displeasure. There is ...
,
perception
Perception () is the organization, identification, and interpretation of sensory information in order to represent and understand the presented information or environment. All perception involves signals that go through the nervous syste ...
,
motivation
Motivation is an mental state, internal state that propels individuals to engage in goal-directed behavior. It is often understood as a force that explains why people or animals initiate, continue, or terminate a certain behavior at a particul ...
, and
mental health
Mental health is often mistakenly equated with the absence of mental illness. However, mental health refers to a person's overall emotional, psychological, and social well-being. It influences how individuals think, feel, and behave, and how t ...
. It also examines how the understanding of cognition, emotion, motivation, and similar psychological processes inform or constrain our models of cultural and social processes. Each school within psychological anthropology has its own approach.
History
Psychological anthropology emerged during the 20th century as a subfield of anthropology. The formal development of the sub-discipline is often attributed to anthropologist Franz Boas and some of his students, among whom were Margaret Mead, Ruth Benedict, and Edward Sapir. Boas, a founding influence of cultural anthropology, is one of the most important figures in the history of American anthropology. Like many of his contemporaries, Boas was intrigued by questions about the human mind. He likely read and engaged with psychoanalytical theory, such as that of Sigmund Freud, whose work was considered both controversial and groundbreaking during that era.
Wilhelm Wundt
Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt (; ; 16 August 1832 – 31 August 1920) was a German physiologist, philosopher, and professor, one of the fathers of modern psychology. Wundt, who distinguished psychology as a science from philosophy and biology, was t ...
was a German psychologist and pioneer in folk psychology. His objectives were to form psychological explanations using the reports of ethnologists. He made different contracting stages such as the 'totemic' stage, the 'age of heroes and gods', and the 'enlightened age of humanity'. Unlike most, Wundt believed that the mind of both 'primitive' and civilised groups had equivalent learning capabilities but that they simply used that capacity in different ways.
Though intimately connected in many ways, the fields of
anthropology
Anthropology is the scientific study of humanity, concerned with human behavior, human biology, cultures, society, societies, and linguistics, in both the present and past, including archaic humans. Social anthropology studies patterns of behav ...
and psychology have remained two distinct disciplines, in part because of their differing methodologies and disciplinary objectives. Where anthropology was traditionally geared towards historical and evolutionary trends, what psychology concerned itself with was more ahistorical and acultural in nature. Psychoanalysis joined the two fields together.
In 1972
Francis L. K. Hsu suggested that the field of culture and personality be renamed 'psychological anthropology'. Hsu considered the original title old fashioned given that many anthropologists regarded personality and culture as the same, or in need of better explanations. During the 1970s and 1980s, psychological anthropology began to shift its focus towards the study of human behaviour in a natural setting.
Schools
Psychoanalytic anthropology
This school is based upon the insights of
Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud ( ; ; born Sigismund Schlomo Freud; 6 May 1856 – 23 September 1939) was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, a clinical method for evaluating and treating psychopathology, pathologies seen as originating fro ...
and other psychoanalysts as applied to social and cultural phenomena. Adherents of this approach often assumed that techniques of child-rearing shaped adult personality and that cultural symbols (including myths, dreams, and rituals) could be interpreted using
psychoanalytical theories and techniques. The latter included interviewing techniques based on clinical interviewing, the use of projective tests such as the
TAT and the
Rorschach, and a tendency towards including case studies of individual interviewees in their ethnographies. A major example of this approach was the Six Cultures Study under John and Beatrice Whiting in
Harvard's Department of Social Relations. This study examined child-rearing in six very different cultures (New England Baptist community; a Philippine barrio; an Okinawan village; an Indian village in Mexico; a northern Indian caste group; and a rural tribal group in Kenya).
Some practitioners look specifically at mental illness cross-culturally (
George Devereux) or at the ways in which social processes such as the oppression of ethnic minorities affect mental health (
Abram Kardiner), while others focus on the ways in which cultural symbols or social institutions provide defense mechanisms (
Melford Spiro) or otherwise alleviate psychological conflicts (
Gananath Obeyesekere
Gananath Obeyesekere (2 February 1930 – 25 March 2025) was a Sri Lankan anthropologist of religion and professor of anthropology at Princeton University. His research focused on psychoanalysis and anthropology and how personal symbolism is rel ...
). Some have also examined the cross-cultural applicability of psychoanalytic concepts such as the
Oedipus complex
In classical psychoanalytic theory, the Oedipus complex is a son's sexual attitude towards his mother and concomitant hostility toward his father, first formed during the phallic stage of psychosexual development. A daughter's attitude of desire ...
(
Melford Spiro).
Others who might be considered part of this school are a number of scholars who, although psychoanalysts, conducted fieldwork (
Erich Fromm
Erich Seligmann Fromm (; ; March 23, 1900 – March 18, 1980) was a German-American social psychologist, psychoanalyst, sociologist, humanistic philosopher, and democratic socialist. He was a German Jew who fled the Nazi regime and set ...
) or used psychoanalytic techniques to analyze materials gathered by anthropologists (Sigmund Freud,
Erik Erikson
Erik Homburger Erikson (born Erik Salomonsen; 15 June 1902 – 12 May 1994) was a German-American child psychoanalyst and visual artist known for his theory on psychosocial development of human beings. He coined the phrase identity crisis.
...
,
Géza Róheim
Géza Róheim ( ; September 12, 1891 – June 7, 1953) was a Hungarian psychoanalyst and anthropologist.
Considered by some as the most important anthropologist-psychoanalyst, he is often credited with founding the field of psychoanalytic ...
).
Because many American social scientists during the first two-thirds of the 20th century had at least a passing familiarity with psychoanalytic theory, it is hard to determine precisely which ones should be considered primarily as psychoanalytic anthropologists. Many anthropologists who studied personality (
Cora Du Bois,
Clyde Kluckhohn,
Geoffrey Gorer
Geoffrey Edgar Solomon Gorer (26 March 1905 – 24 May 1985) was an English anthropologist and writer, noted for his application of psychoanalytic techniques to anthropology.
Biography
Born into a non-practising Jewish family, Gorer was educated ...
) drew heavily on psychoanalysis; most members of the "culture and personality school" of psychological anthropology did so.
In recent years, psychoanalytic and more broadly psychodynamic theory continues to influence some psychological anthropologists (such as
Gilbert Herdt
Gilbert H. Herdt (born February 24, 1949) is Emeritus Professor of Human Sexuality Studies and Anthropology and a Founder of the Department of Sexuality Studies and National Sexuality Resource Center at San Francisco State University. He founded ...
,
Douglas Hollan, and
Robert LeVine) and have contributed significantly to such approaches as
person-centered ethnography and
clinical ethnography. It thus may make more sense to consider psychoanalytic anthropology since the latter part of the 20th century as more a style or a set of research agendas that cut across several other approaches within anthropology.
See also:
Robert I. Levy,
Ari Kiev.
Jeannette Mageo.
Culture and personality
Personality is the overall characteristics that a person possesses. All of these characteristics are acquired within a culture. However, when a person changes his or her culture, his or her personality automatically changes because the person learns to follow the norms and values of the new culture, and this, in turn, influences the individual's personal characteristics.
Configurationalist approach
This approach describes a culture as a personality; that is, interpretation of experiences, guided by symbolic structure, creates personality which is "copied" into the larger culture. Leading figures include
Ruth Benedict
Ruth Fulton Benedict (June 5, 1887 – September 17, 1948) was an American anthropologist and folklorist.
She was born in New York City, attended Vassar College, and graduated in 1909. After studying anthropology at the New School of Social ...
,
A. Irving Hallowell, and
Margaret Mead
Margaret Mead (December 16, 1901 – November 15, 1978) was an American cultural anthropologist, author and speaker, who appeared frequently in the mass media during the 1960s and the 1970s.
She earned her bachelor's degree at Barnard Col ...
.
Basic and modal personality
Major figures include
John Whiting and
Beatrice Whiting,
Cora Du Bois, and
Florence Kluckhohn.
National character
Leading figures include sociologist
Alex Inkeles
Alex Inkeles (March 4, 1920 – July 9, 2010) was an American sociologist and social psychologist. His main areas of research were national character and the culture and society of the Soviet Union. His career was mostly spent at Harvard Un ...
and anthropologist
Clyde Kluckhohn.
Ethnopsychology
Major figures:
Vincent Crapanzano,
Georges Devereux,
Tobie Nathan,
Catherine Lutz,
Michelle Zimbalist Rosaldo,
Renato Rosaldo,
Charles Nuckolls,
Bradd Shore, and
Dorinne K. Kondo
Dorinne K. Kondo is a professor of American studies and Ethnic group, Ethnicity and Anthropology at the University of Southern California. She is a scholar, playwright, and has over 20 years of work experience in dramaturge; her work shows the str ...
Cognitive anthropology
Cognitive anthropology takes a number of methodological approaches, but generally draws on the insights of
cognitive science
Cognitive science is the interdisciplinary, scientific study of the mind and its processes. It examines the nature, the tasks, and the functions of cognition (in a broad sense). Mental faculties of concern to cognitive scientists include percep ...
in its model of the
mind
The mind is that which thinks, feels, perceives, imagines, remembers, and wills. It covers the totality of mental phenomena, including both conscious processes, through which an individual is aware of external and internal circumstances ...
. A basic premise is that people think with the aid of
schemas, units of culturally shared knowledge that are hypothesized to be represented in the brain as networks of neural connections. This entails certain properties of cultural models, and may explain both part of the observed inertia of cultural models (people's assumptions about the way the world works are hard to change) and patterns of association.
Roy D'Andrade (1995) sees the history of cognitive anthropology proper as divisible into four phases. The first began in the 1950s with the explicit formulation of culture as knowledge by anthropologists such as
Ward Goodenough
Ward Hunt Goodenough II (May 30, 1919 – June 9, 2013) was an American anthropologist, who has made contributions to kinship studies, linguistic anthropology, cross-cultural studies, and cognitive anthropology.
Biography and major works
G ...
and
Anthony Wallace. From the late 1950s through the mid-1960s, attention focused on categorization,
componential analysis Componential analysis (feature analysis or contrast analysis) is the analysis of words through structured sets of semantic features, which are given as "present", "absent" or "indifferent with reference to feature". The method thus departs from the ...
(a technique borrowed from structuralist linguistics), and native or folk systems of knowledge (
ethnoscience e.g.,
ethnobotany
Ethnobotany is an interdisciplinary field at the interface of natural and social sciences that studies the relationships between humans and plants. It focuses on traditional knowledge of how plants are used, managed, and perceived in human socie ...
,
ethnolinguistics
Ethnolinguistics (sometimes called cultural linguistics) is an area of anthropological linguistics that studies the relationship between a language or group of languages and the cultural practices of the people who speak those languages.
It exam ...
and so on), as well as discoveries in patterns of
color
Color (or colour in English in the Commonwealth of Nations, Commonwealth English; American and British English spelling differences#-our, -or, see spelling differences) is the visual perception based on the electromagnetic spectrum. Though co ...
naming by
Brent Berlin
Overton Brent Berlin (born 1936) is an American anthropologist, most noted for his work with linguist Paul Kay on color, and his ethnobiological research among the Maya of Chiapas, Mexico.
He received his Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1964. ...
and
Paul Kay. During the 1950s and 1960s, most of the work in cognitive anthropology was carried out at Yale, University of Pennsylvania, Stanford, Berkeley, University of California, Irvine, and the
Harvard Department of Social Relations
The Department of Social Relations was an interdisciplinary collaboration among three of the social science departments at Harvard University (anthropology, psychology, and sociology) beginning in 1946. Originally, the program was headquartered in ...
. The third phase looked at types of categories (
Eleanor Rosch
Eleanor Rosch (once known as Eleanor Rosch Heider;"Natural Categories", Cognitive Psychology, Vol. 4, No. 3, (May 1973), p. 328. born 9 July 1938) is an American psychologist. She is a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berk ...
) and cultural models, drawing on schema theory, linguistic work on metaphor (
George Lakoff
George Philip Lakoff ( ; born May 24, 1941) is an American cognitive linguist and philosopher, best known for his thesis that people's lives are significantly influenced by the conceptual metaphors they use to explain complex phenomena.
The ...
,
Mark Johnson). The current phase, beginning in the 1990s, has seen more focus on the problem of how cultural models are shared and distributed, as well as on motivation, with significant work taking place at UC San Diego, UCLA, UC Berkeley, University of Connecticut, and Australian National University, among others.
Currently, different cognitive anthropologists are concerned with how groups of individuals are able to coordinate activities and "thinking" (
Edwin Hutchins); with the distribution of cultural models (who knows what, and how people access knowledge within a culture:
Dorothy Holland,
A. Kimball Romney,
Dan Sperber
Dan Sperber (born 20 June 1942 in Cagnes-sur-Mer) is a French social and cognitive scientist, anthropologist and philosopher. His most influential work has been in the fields of cognitive anthropology, linguistic pragmatics, psychology of rea ...
,
Marc Swartz); with conflicting models within a culture (
Naomi Quinn,
Holly Mathews); or the ways in which cultural models are internalized and come to motivate behavior (
Roy D'Andrade,
Naomi Quinn,
Charles Nuckolls,
Bradd Shore,
Claudia Strauss). Some cognitive anthropologists continue work on ethnoscience (
Scott Atran
Scott Atran (born February 6, 1952) is an American-French cultural anthropologist who is Emeritus Director of Research in Anthropology at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique in Paris, Research Professor at the University of Michigan ...
), most notably in collaborative field projects with cognitive and social psychologists on culturally universal versus culturally particular models of human categorization and inference and how these mental models hinder or help social adaptations to natural environments. Others focus on methodological issues such as how to identify cultural models. Related work in
cognitive linguistics
Cognitive linguistics is an interdisciplinary branch of linguistics, combining knowledge and research from cognitive science, cognitive psychology, neuropsychology and linguistics. Models and theoretical accounts of cognitive linguistics are cons ...
and
semantics
Semantics is the study of linguistic Meaning (philosophy), meaning. It examines what meaning is, how words get their meaning, and how the meaning of a complex expression depends on its parts. Part of this process involves the distinction betwee ...
also carries forward research on the
Sapir–Whorf hypothesis
Linguistic relativity asserts that language influences worldview or cognition. One form of linguistic relativity, linguistic determinism, regards peoples' languages as determining and influencing the scope of cultural perceptions of their surrou ...
and looks at the relationship between language and thought (
Maurice Bloch
Maurice Émile Félix Bloch (born 21 October 1939) is a British anthropologist. He is famous for his fieldwork on the shift of agriculturalists in Madagascar, Japan and other parts of the world, and has also contributed important neo-Marxian w ...
,
John Lucy,
Anna Wierzbicka
Anna Wierzbicka (born 10 March 1938 in Warsaw) is a Polish people, Polish linguistics, linguist who is Emeritus Professor at the Australian National University, Canberra. Brought up in Poland, she graduated from Warsaw University and emigrated ...
).
Psychiatric anthropology
While not forming a school in the sense of having a particular methodological approach, a number of prominent psychological anthropologists have addressed significant attention to the interaction of culture and mental health or mental illness (see
Janis H. Jenkins), ranging through the description and analysis of
culture-bound syndrome
In medicine and medical anthropology, a culture-bound syndrome, culture-specific syndrome, or folk illness is a combination of psychiatric and somatic symptoms that are considered to be a recognizable disease only within a specific society or c ...
s (Pow-Meng Yap,
Ronald Simons, Charles Hughes); the relationship between cultural values or culturally mediated experiences and the development or expression of mental illness (among immigrants, for instance more particularly) (
Thomas Csordas,
George Devereux,
Robert Edgerton, Sue Estroff,
Arthur Kleinman
Arthur Michael Kleinman (born March 11, 1941) is an American psychiatrist, social anthropologist and a professor of medical anthropology, psychiatry and global health and social medicine at Harvard University.
Kleinman's medical anthropology ...
,
Janis H. Jenkins,
Roberto Beneduce,
Robert Lemelson, Theresa O'Nell,
Marvin Opler); to the training of mental health practitioners and the cultural construction of mental health as a profession (
Charles W. Nuckolls,
Tanya Luhrmann), and more recently what
Janis H. Jenkins refers to the cultural creation of a "pharmaceutical self" in a globalizing world (Jenkins 2011). Recent research focuses on specific relationships between History, conscience, cultural Self and suffering (Roberto Beneduce, Etnopsichiatria. Sofferenza mentale e alterità fra Storia, dominio e cultura, 2007). Some of these have been primarily trained as psychiatrists rather than anthropologists:
Abram Kardiner,
Arthur Kleinman
Arthur Michael Kleinman (born March 11, 1941) is an American psychiatrist, social anthropologist and a professor of medical anthropology, psychiatry and global health and social medicine at Harvard University.
Kleinman's medical anthropology ...
,
Robert I. Levy,
Roberto Beneduce,
Roland Littlewood. Further research has been done on genetic predisposition, family's contribution to the genesis of psychopathology, and the contribution of environmental factors such as tropical diseases, natural catastrophes, and occupational hazards.
Today
During most of the history of modern anthropology (with the possible exception of the 1930s through the 1950s, when it was an influential approach within American social thought), psychological anthropology has been a relatively small though productive subfield. D'Andrade, for instance, estimates that the core group of scholars engaged in active research in cognitive anthropology (one of the smaller sub-subfields), have numbered some 30 anthropologists and linguists, with the total number of scholars identifying with this subfield likely being less than 200 at any one time.
[D'Andrade (1995: xiv)]
At present, relatively few universities have active graduate training programs in psychological anthropology. These include:
Centre Georges Devreux Paris 8 UniversityAustralian National University - Linguistics and Applied Linguistics ProgramBrunel University, West London - MSc program in psychological and psychiatric anthropologyCase Western Reserve University - MA, PhD in cultural anthropologyDuke University - Cultural AnthropologyEmory University - AnthropologyLondon School of Economics - AnthropologyUniversity of Bergen, Norway - Social AnthropologyUniversity of California, Berkeley - Anthropologyan
LinguisticsUniversity of California, Irvine - AnthropologyUniversity of California, Los Angeles - Anthropologyan
Cognitive ScienceUniversity of Chicago - Human DevelopmentUniversity of Connecticut - AnthropologyUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill - AnthropologyUniversity College London - MSc in Medical Anthropology, MSc in Biosocial Medical Anthropology, PhD in Anthropology
Also, social medicine and cross-cultural/transcultural psychiatry programs at:
Harvard - Department of Global Health & Social MedicineMcGill - Division of Social and Transcultural PsychiatryPontificia Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso - Master in EthnopsychologyUniversità degli Studi di Trieste - Department of EthnopsychologyQueen Mary University of London - MSc Mental Health: Cultural Psychology and PsychiatryUniversity College London - Division of Psychiatry (Critical, Social, Cultural Psychiatry within Epidemiology and Applied Clinical Research Department)
See also
*
Cognitive anthropology
Cognitive anthropology is a subfield of anthropology influenced by Linguistic anthropology, cultural anthropology, and biological anthropology in which scholars seek to explain patterns of shared knowledge, cultural innovation, and transmission ...
*
Cognitive science
Cognitive science is the interdisciplinary, scientific study of the mind and its processes. It examines the nature, the tasks, and the functions of cognition (in a broad sense). Mental faculties of concern to cognitive scientists include percep ...
*
Cultural psychology
Cultural psychology is the study of how cultures reflect and shape their members' psychological processes.Heine, S. J. (2011). ''Cultural Psychology. ''New York: W. W. Norton & Company.
It is based on the premise that the mind and culture are ins ...
*
Egocentrism
Egocentrism refers to difficulty differentiating between self and other. More specifically, it is difficulty in accurately perceiving and understanding perspectives other than one's own.
Egocentrism is found across the life span: in infancy, ea ...
*
Enculturation
Enculturation is the process by which people learn the dynamics of their surrounding culture and acquire values and norms appropriate or necessary to that culture and its worldviews.
Definition and history of research
The term enculturation ...
*
Development of religion
The history of religion is the written record of human religious feelings, thoughts, and ideas. This period of religious history begins with the invention of writing about 5,200 years ago (3200 BCE). The Prehistoric religion, prehistory of reli ...
*
Harvard Department of Social Relations
The Department of Social Relations was an interdisciplinary collaboration among three of the social science departments at Harvard University (anthropology, psychology, and sociology) beginning in 1946. Originally, the program was headquartered in ...
*
Social psychology
Social psychology is the methodical study of how thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by the actual, imagined, or implied presence of others. Although studying many of the same substantive topics as its counterpart in the field ...
*
Symbolic interactionism
Symbolic interactionism is a sociological theory that develops from practical considerations and alludes to humans' particular use of shared language to create common symbols and meanings, for use in both intra- and interpersonal communication.
...
References
Bibliography
Selected historical works and textbooks
* Bock, Philip K. (1999) ''Rethinking Psychological Anthropology, 2nd Ed''., New York: W. H. Freeman
* D'Andrade, Roy G. (1995). ''The Development of Cognitive Anthropology''. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
* Hsu, Francis L. K., ed. (1972) ''Psychological Anthropology''. Cambridge: Schenkman Publishing Company, Inc.
*
Wilhelm Max Wundt, ''Völkerpsychologie: Eine Untersuchung der Entwicklungsgesetze von Sprache, Mythus und Sitte'', Leipzig (1917); 2002 reprint: .
Selected theoretical works in psychological anthropology
* Bateson, Gregory (1956) ''Steps to an Ecology of Mind''. New York: Ballantine Books.
*
* Kilborne, Benjamin and L. L. Langness, eds. (1987). ''Culture and Human Nature: Theoretical papers of Melford E. Spiro''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Nuckolls, Charles W. (1996) ''The Cultural Dialectics of Knowledge and Desire''. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.* Nuckolls, Charles W. (1998) ''Culture: A Problem that Cannot be Solved''. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
*
*
* Sapir, Edward (1956) ''Culture, Language, and Personality: selected essays''. Edited by D. G. Mandelbaum. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
* Schwartz, Theodore, Geoffrey M. White, and Catherine A. Lutz, eds. (1992) ''New Directions in Psychological Anthropology''. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
* Shore, Bradd (1995) ''Culture in Mind: cognition, culture, and the problem of meaning''. New York: Oxford University Press.
* Shweder, Richard A. and Robert A. LeVine, eds. (1984). ''Culture Theory: Essays on mind, self, and emotion''. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
* Strauss, Claudia and Naomi Quinn (1997). ''A Cognitive Theory of Cultural Meaning''. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
*
Selected ethnographic works in psychological anthropology
* Benedict, Ruth (1946) ''The Chrysanthemum and the Sword: Patterns of Japanese Culture''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.
*
Boddy, Janice. Wombs and alien spirits: Women, men, and the Zar cult in northern Sudan. Univ of Wisconsin Press, 1989.
* Briggs, Jean (1970) ''Never in Anger: Portrait of an Eskimo family''. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
* Crapanzano, Vincent. The Hamadsha: A Study in Moroccan Ethnopsychiatry. University of California Pr, 1973.
* Crapanzano, Vincent. Tuhami: portrait of a Moroccan. University of Chicago Press, 1985.
* Du Bois, Cora Alice (1960) ''The people of Alor; a social-psychological study of an East Indian island''. With analyses by Abram Kardiner and Emil Oberholzer. New York: Harper.
* Herdt, Gilbert (1981) ''Guardians of the Flutes''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
*
* Levy, Robert I. (1973) ''Tahitians: mind and experience in the Society Islands''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
*
*
* Scheper-Hughes, Nancy (1979) ''Saints, Scholars, and Schizophrenics: mental illness in rural Ireland''. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
* Swartz, Marc J. (1991) ''The Way the World Is: cultural processes and social relations among the Swahili of Mombasa''. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Selected works in psychiatric anthropology
*
*
* Beneduce, Roberto (2007) ''Etnopsichiatria. Sofferenza mentale e alterità fra Storia, dominio e cultura'', Roma: Carocci.
* Jenkins, Janis H. and Robert J. Barrett (2004) ''Schizophrenia, Culture, and Subjectivity: The Edge of Experience.'' New York: Cambridge University Press.
* Jenkins, Janis H. (2011) ''Pharmaceutical Self: The Global Shaping of Experience in an Age of Psychopharmacology.'' Santa Fe, NM: School of Advanced Research.
* Lézé, Samuel (2014)
Anthropology of mental illness, in : Andrew Scull (ed.), ''Cultural Sociology of Mental Illness : an A-to-Z Guide'', Sage, 2014, pp. 31–32
* Kardiner, Abram, with the collaboration of Ralph Linton, Cora Du Bois and James West (pseud.) (1945) ''The psychological frontiers of society''. New York: Columbia University Press.
* Kleinman, Arthur (1980) ''Patients and healers in the context of culture: an exploration of the borderland between anthropology, medicine, and psychiatry''. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
* Kleinman, Arthur (1986) ''Social origins of distress and disease: depression, neurasthenia, and pain in modern China''. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
* Kleinman, Arthur, & Good, Byron, eds. (1985) ''Culture and Depression: studies in the anthropology and cross-cultural psychology of affect and disorder''. Berkeley / Los Angeles: University of California Press.
* Luhrmann, Tanya M. (2000) ''Of two minds: The growing disorder in American psychiatry''. New York, NY, US: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
* O'Nell, Theresa D. (1996) ''Disciplined Hearts: History, identity, and depression in an American Indian community''. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
*
External links
Anthropology and Mental Health Special Interest Group (AMHIG), Society of Medical Anthropology, AAAENPA - European Network for Psychological Anthropology''Ethos''– journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology
The Foundation for Psychocultural Research– essay at Indiana University
{{Authority control
Anthropology