Applying Sociocultural Theory to Explain Cognitive Development of the Queer Mediums in Southeast Asia
Journal of Social sciences Naresuan University June 23, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.69650/jssnu.2026.281332 via OpenAlex
Summary
Spirit mediumship among gender-diverse individuals in Southeast Asia acts as a cultural tool that transforms marginalized social identity into sacred agency. The practice provides a neural buffer for the prefrontal cortex and amygdala, mitigating chronic minority stress by regulating cortisol levels and bolstering executive functions. It restructures self-perception from alienation to interconnectedness. Digital social media platforms create "Digital More Knowledgeable Others" that democratize access to esoteric knowledge. The research argues that sustainable development must move beyond human-centric models to include indigenous spiritual systems as cognitive scaffolds for psychological resilience and social agency.
Study at a glance
| Design | qualitative study |
|---|---|
| Population | gender-diverse spirit mediums in Southeast Asia |
| Key finding | Spirit mediumship functions as a cultural tool that facilitates cognitive restructuring, provides neuro-protective scaffolding against minority stress, and fosters psychological resilience through interconnectedness. |
Abstract
This research investigates the intersection of Neo-Animism ontology, sociocultural theory, and cognitive development in the trance rituals of gender-diverse spirit mediums in Southeast Asia. The United Nations’ 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development has faced scrutiny for its anthropocentric focus on economic growth, which often overlooks gender diversity and the ontological interconnectedness between human and non-human entities. Key Findings include 1) Cultural Tools for Cognitive Restructuring: Spirit mediumship functions as a sophisticated “cultural tool,” facilitating a shift in social identity from marginalized status to sacred agency. 2) Neuro-Protective Scaffolding: The practice mitigates spiritual cognitive dissonance and provides a “neural buffer” for the prefrontal cortex and amygdala. This process counteracts chronic minority stress by regulating cortisol levels and bolstering executive functions. 3) Cognitive Re-alignment: Results indicate a profound restructuring of self-perception, transitioning from alienation to “interconnectedness.” 4) Digital Democratization: The study identifies the rise of “Digital More Knowledgeable Others” (MKOs) on social media, which democratizes access to esoteric knowledge. In conclusion, this research challenges Western-centric secularization paradigms by asserting that sustainable development in Southeast Asia must transcend purely human-centric models. It argues that indigenous spiritual systems are not merely coping mechanisms but vital cognitive scaffolds that foster psychological resilience and redistribute social agency. These findings offer a critical framework for utilizing culture as a driver for inclusive, gender-sensitive, sustainable development.