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Not You: Addiction, Relapse, and Release in Uganda.

China Scherz, George Mpanga, Sarah Namirembe

Culture, medicine and psychiatry March 1, 2022 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1007/s11013-021-09722-9 via PubMed

Summary

In Uganda, many Pentecostals and spirit mediums view addiction not as a chronic brain disease but as control by an external spirit. They differ on whether that spirit is morally good or evil and what to do about it. Based on four years of ethnographic fieldwork, the article argues that these idioms of bondage and possession contain concepts and practices that point toward the possibility of release from alcohol addiction, offering an alternative to the chronic relapsing brain disease model.

Study at a glance

Design ethnography
Population Ugandan Pentecostals and spirit mediums
Key finding Ugandan Pentecostal and spirit medium views of addiction as possession by external spirits offer concepts and practices pointing toward release from alcohol addiction, contrasting with the chronic relapsing brain disease model.

Abstract

In recent years, alcohol abuse and dependence have become topics of increasing concern in Uganda, but the chronic relapsing brain disease model of addiction remains only one of many ways of understanding and addressing alcohol-related problems there. For many Ugandan Pentecostals and spirit mediums to be addicted is to be under the control of a being that comes from outside the self. Where these two groups differ, and here they differ strongly, is in regard to the moral valence of these external spirits and what ought to be done about them. This article draws on four years of collaborative ethnographic fieldwork to explore the affordances of these ways of viewing and experiencing addiction and recovery for Ugandans attempting to leave alcohol behind. While the idioms of bondage, dedication, and possession are at times severe, this article argues that they contain within them concepts and practices that point away from models of addiction as a chronic relapsing brain disease and towards the possibility of release.

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