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"Just some spirits": the erosion of spirit possession and the rise of "tension" in South India.

Murphy Halliburton

Medical anthropology January 1, 2005 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1080/01459740590933849 via PubMed

Summary

Spirit possession in Kerala, India, is declining in incidence and becoming more homogenized, with spirits losing distinct names and personalities. Psychological terms like "tension" and "depression" are increasingly used. These shifts suggest a move toward universal categories, a hallmark of modernity, yet the modern context can also be re-appropriated, as when possession idioms appear in psychological advice columns.

Study at a glance

Design qualitative study
Population possessed and mentally ill patients in Kerala, India, and depictions in popular media
Key finding Spirit possession in Kerala is declining and becoming more anonymous, while psychological idioms are proliferating, reflecting modernity's universalizing influence, though possession idioms persist in modern contexts like advice columns.

Abstract

Based on research among possessed and mentally ill patients and an examination of depictions of mental health issues in the popular media in the state of Kerala, India, this article examines apparent changes in the incidence and form of spirit possession and the proliferation of psychological idioms such as "tension" and "depression." These changes involve a decline in the incidence of possession as well as the homogenization of the identities of spirits: spirits that were described as having names and personalities a few decades earlier are now presented as more anonymous. The homogenization of spirits and the use of psychological idioms are interpreted as signaling an erosion of context and the ascendance of universal categories, which, according to some theorists, is a characteristic of "modernity." It will also be shown that at the same time the "modern" can appear as simply another context, as when the idiom of possession permeates a psychological advice column in the print media.

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