Sanity and sanctity : mental health work among the ultra-orthodox in Jerusalem /

Greenberg, David, 1949-

Sanity and sanctity : mental health work among the ultra-orthodox in Jerusalem / David Greenberg and Eliezer Witztum. - 1 online resource (x, 389 pages)

Includes bibliographical references (pages 363-382) and index.

1. To Begin, Just Say, "How Are You?" -- 2. The Initiation of Mental Health Care for the Ultra-Orthodox -- 3. Changing Attitudes in Cultural Psychiatry -- 4. A Match Is Arranged Between Cultural Psychiatry and Ultra-Orthodox Judaism -- 5. Varieties of Religious Identification -- 6. The Parable of the Turkey -- 7. Beliefs and Delusions -- 8. Visions and Hallucinations: Angels in Today's World -- 9. Nocturnal Hallucinations -- 10. "A Big Man Dressed in Black Is Hitting Me": Deconstructing the Narrative -- 11. Phenomenology and Differential Diagnoses of Nocturnal Hallucinations -- 12. Normative Rituals -- 13. Ritual as Psychopathology, or Is the Code of Jewish Law a Compulsive's Natural Habitat? -- 14. Religious Ritual and OCD: Is the Torah a "Perfect Medicine" or Does It Cause OCD? -- 15. The Baal Teshuva and Mental Health, or Why the Camel Changed His Burden, and How He Felt About It -- 16. Mental Illness and Religious Change: The Chicken or the Egg -- 17. "A Very Narrow Bridge": Pyschopathology Among Baalei Teshuva in a Fringe Hasidic Group -- 18. Mysticism and Psychosis: The Fate of Ben Zoma -- 19. "Jerusalem Syndrome": Tourists Who Freak Out and Break Down in the Holy City -- 20. Ultra-Orthodox Attitudes Toward Mental Health Care -- 21. Improving Mental Health Care for the Ultra-Orthodox -- 22. Treating Depression in the Community by the Community -- 23. The Soldier of the Apocalypse -- 24. The Healing Power of Ritual -- 25. Paradise Regained: Breaking Through the Mask of Catatonia -- 26. Betrayal: The Prince and the Wise Man Revisited -- 27. Broken Souls Are Not Easily Mended.

Ultra-orthodox Jews in Jerusalem are isolated from the secular community that surrounds them not only physically but by their dress, behaviours, and beliefs. Their relationship with secular society is characterised by social, religious, and political tensions. The differences between the ultra-orthodox and secular often pose special difficulties for psychiatrists who attempt to deal with their needs. In this book, two Western-trained psychiatrists discuss their mental health work with this community over the past two decades.

9780300131994 (electronic book) 0300131992 (electronic book) (cloth) (cloth)

22573/ctt1m3nrg JSTOR


Ultra-Orthodox Jews--Psychology.
Cultural psychiatry.
Psychology, Pathological--Cross-cultural studies.
Orthodox Judaism--Psychology.
Psychiatry, Transcultural.
Mental health services.
Medical personnel and patient.
Jews--psychology
Mental Health Services
Culturally Competent Care
Professional-Patient Relations
Ethnopsychology
Juifs ultra-orthodoxes--Psychologie.
Ethnopsychiatrie.
Psychopathologie--Études transculturelles.
Judaïsme orthodoxe--Psychologie.
Services de santé mentale.
Relations personnel médical-patient.
MEDICAL--Psychiatry--General.
PSYCHOLOGY--Psychopathology--General.
PSYCHOLOGY--Clinical Psychology.
PSYCHOLOGY--Mental Illness.
MEDICAL--Mental Health.
Cultural psychiatry.
Orthodox Judaism--Psychology.
Psychology, Pathological.


Israel


Electronic books.
Cross-cultural studies.

RC451.5.J4 / G74 2001eb

616.89/0088/296

WA 305 JI9 / G795s 2001

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