• Title of article

    The black box in somatization: Unexplained physical symptoms, culture, and narratives of trauma

  • Author/Authors

    Howard Waitzkin، نويسنده , , Holly Maga?a، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    811
  • To page
    825
  • Abstract
    Stimulated by our clinical work with patients who manifest unexplained “somatoform” symptoms in the primary care setting, this article addresses a theoretical black box in our understanding of somatization: how does culture mediate severe stress to produce symptoms that cannot be explained by the presence of physical illness? Despite various problems in his explanation of hysteria, Freud broke new ground by emphasizing narratives of traumatic experiences in the development and treatment of unexplained physical symptoms. Except in anthropologically oriented cultural psychiatry, contemporary psychiatry has traveled away from a focus on narrative in the study of somatization. On the other hand, recent interest in narrative has spread across many intellectual disciplines, including the humanities and literary criticism, psychology, history, anthropology, and sociology. We operationally define narratives as attempts at storytelling that portray the interrelationships among physical symptoms and the psychologic, social, or cultural context of these symptoms. Regarding somatization and trauma, we focus on the ways that narrative integrates the cultural context with traumatic life events. In explaining the black box, we postulate that extreme stress (torture, rape, witnessing deaths of relatives, forced migration, etc.) is processed psychologically as a terrible, largely incoherent narrative of events too awful to hold in consciousness. Culture patterns the psychologic and somatic expression of the terrible narrative. Methodologically, we have developed some techniques for eliciting narratives of severe stress and somatic symptoms, which we illustrate with observations from an ongoing research project. In designing interventions to improve the care of somatizing patients, we are focusing on the creation of social situations where patients may feel empowered to express more coherent narratives of their prior traumatic experiences.
  • Keywords
    narrative , patient-doctor communication , somatization , Trauma
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    1997
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    599499