Piblokto

Piblokto, also known as pibloktoq and Arctic hysteria, is a condition most commonly appearing in Inughuit (Greenlandic Inuit) societies living within the Arctic Circle. Piblokto is a culture-specific hysterical reaction in Inuit, especially women, who may perform irrational or dangerous acts, followed by amnesia for the event. Piblokto may be linked to repression of the personality of Inuit women.[1] The condition appears most commonly in winter.[2] It is considered to be a form of a culture-bound syndrome, although more recent studies (see Skepticism section) question whether it exists at all. Piblokto is also part of the glossary of cultural bound syndromes found in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV).[3]

History

Piblokto was first documented in 1892 and reports by European explorers describe the phenomenon as common to all Arctic regions. Explorers were the first to record piblokto in writing. Among these, Admiral Robert Peary provided a detailed look into the disorder during an expedition to Greenland. The acts Peary and his men witnessed among the Inuit women provided entertainment, and, having sent the women's male counterparts out on missions, Peary's men reaped the sexual benefits of being the only males present.[4] Piblokto is not limited to the indigenous people; reports of stranded sailors during the 1800s exhibiting the same symptoms have been found. The disorder is said to have existed before Western contact and still occurs today.[5] However, as discussed below, many scholars now hold that culture bound disorders may often be an artifact of colonial encounters, and contemporary discussions of piblokto in medical anthropology and cross-cultural psychiatry consider it to be an example of the suspect nature of culture bound syndromes.[6]

Origin

Piblokto is most often found in but not confined to the Inughuit culture in the polar regions of northern Greenland. Similar symptoms have been reported in European sailors stranded in Arctic regions in the 1800s. Among the Inughuit, the attacks are not considered out of the ordinary. No native theory of the disorder is currently reported. This condition is most often seen in Inughuit women.[7] Piblokto is most common during long Arctic nights.[8]

Symptoms

Piblokto is an abrupt dissociative episode with four phases: social withdrawal, excitement, convulsions and stupor, and recovery.[9] In his book Handbook of Cultural Psychiatry, Wen-Shing Tseng provides the following example adapted from Foulks:[10]

Mrs. A is a 30-year-old woman who has had periodic episodes of "strange experiences" in the past 3 years (since her mother's death). Three years ago, in the winter, during her first episode, she was acutely assaultive and tried to harm herself. The attack lasted about 15 min and she remembered nothing about it afterward. Two years ago, she had her second attack, which lasted about half an hour, during which time she ran from her home into the snow, tearing off her clothing.

Causes

Although there is no known cause for piblokto, Western scientists have attributed the disorder to the lack of sun, the extreme cold, and the desolate state of most villages in the region. A reason for this disorder present in this culture may be due to the isolation of their cultural group.[11]

This culture-bound syndrome is possibly linked to vitamin A toxicity (hypervitaminosis A).[12][13] The native Inughuit diet or Eskimo nutrition provides rich sources of vitamin A through the ingestion of livers, kidneys, and fat of arctic fish and mammals and is possibly the cause or a causative factor. This causative factor is through the disturbance that has been reported for males, females, adults, children, and dogs.[14] The ingestion of organ meats, particularly the livers of some Arctic mammals, such as the polar bear and bearded seal, where the vitamin is stored in toxic quantities, can be fatal to most people.

Inughuit tradition states that it is caused by evil spirits possessing the living. Shamanism and animism are dominant themes in Inughuit traditional beliefs with the angakkuq (healer) acting as a mediator with the supernatural forces. Angakkuit use trance states to communicate with spirits and carry out faith healing. There is a view among the Inughuit that individuals entering trance states should be treated with respect given the possibility of a new "revelation" emerging as a result. Treatment in piblokto cases usually involves allowing the episode to run its course without interference. While piblokto can often be confused with other conditions, (including epilepsy) in which failure to intervene can lead to the victim coming to harm, most cases tend to be more typical.

Skepticism

Although piblokto has a place in the historical record and official medical canons, a number of Arctic researchers and Arctic residents doubt its existence. The phenomenon, they suggest, may be more rooted in the experience and behavior of the early European explorers than the Inuit themselves.[11]

In 1988 Parks Canada historian Lyle Dick began a substantial challenge to the concept that piblokto exists at all. Dick examined the original records of the European Arctic explorers, and ethnographic and linguistic reports on Inughuit societies, and discovered that not only is the majority of academic speculation into piblokto based on reports of only eight cases, but the word "piblokto" / "pibloktoq" does not exist within Inuktun (the Inughuit language); possibly, Dick concluded, this may have been the result of errors in phonetic transcription. In a 1995 paper published in the journal Arctic Anthropology,[15] and in his 2001 book Muskox land: Ellesmere Island in the Age of Contact, Dick suggests that piblokto is a "phantom phenomenon", arising more from the Inuhuit reaction to European explorers in their midst.[11]

Similarly, Hughes and Simons have described piblokto as a "catch-all rubric under which explorers lumped various Inuhuit anxiety reactions, expressions of resistance to patriarchy or sexual coercion, and shamanistic practice".[16] Simply put, rather than understanding piblokto as a strange cultural phenomenon, some critical scholars now understand it to be an expression of trauma of colonial violence, including rape. For example, transcultural psychiatry scholar Laurence Kirmayer writes:

Most comprehensive psychiatric texts mention pibloktoq as a culture-bound syndrome characterized by sudden wild and erratic behaviour. Recently, the historian Lyle Dick collected all the published accounts of pibloktoq, of which there are only about 25. It seems that psychiatric case description transformed a situation of sexual exploitation of Inuit women by explorers into a discrete disorder worthy of a new diagnostic label. With hindsight, we can see how insensitivity to the impact of exploration on other peoples distorted the picture when vital information on social context was not included. The legacy of these colonialist blinkers is still with us ...[17]

See also

Notes

  1. Also spelled as meriachenie, meryacheniye, meryachenye, meriachen'e, meryachen'e, meriachenye, as well as emiryachenie, emiryachenye, emiriachen'e, emeryachenye, emeriachen'e, emiryachen'e, emiriachenie, emeryachenie.

References

  1. Segen's Medical Dictionary. (2012). Farlex, Inc. Pibloktoq
  2. Taylor, S., Shelor, N., & Abdelnour, M. (1972). Nutritional ecology: a new perspective.
  3. Mezzich JE (2002). "International surveys on the use of ICD-10 and related diagnostic systems". Psychopathology. 35: 72–5. doi:10.1159/000065122. PMID 12145487..
  4. Wallace, Anthony F. C.; Ackerman, Robert E. (1960). "An Interdisciplinary Approach to Mental Disorder among the Polar Eskimos of Northwest Greenland". Anthropologica. 2 (2): 249–260. doi:10.2307/25604472.
  5. Lister, J. "Two Perspectives on the Etiology of Pibloktoq". Archived from the original on 2015-02-20.
  6. Nakamura, Karen (2013). A Disability of the Soul: An Ethnography of Disability and Mental Illness in Contemporary Japan. Cornell University Press. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-8014-5192-8.
  7. Ruiz, P. (2007). "Focusing on Culture and Ethnicity in America" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-26.
  8. Brill, A. (1913). "Piblokto or Hysteria Among Peary's Eskimos". Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 40 (8): 514–520.
  9. Fulk, M. (2012) Pibloktoq.
  10. Tseng, Wen-Shing (2001-06-06). Handbook of Cultural Psychiatry. Academic Press. p. 244. ISBN 9780127016320.
  11. Ephron, Sarah. (July/August 2003) Arctic Hysteria, from Up Here Magazine; archived at SarahEfron.com
  12. Kontaxakis V., Skourides D., Ferentinos P., Havaki-Kontaxaki B., Papadimitriou G. (2009). "Isotretinoid and Psychopathology: A Review". Annals of General Psychiatry. 8: 2. doi:10.1186/1744-859X-8-2. PMC 2637283. PMID 19154613.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. Smith, S. (2012, December 6). What is Piblokto? wiseGEEK: clear answers for common questions. Retrieved March 29, 2013.
  14. Landy D (1985). "Pibloktoq (hysteria) and Inuit nutrition: possible implication of hypervitaminosis A". Soc Sci Med. 21: 173–85. doi:10.1016/0277-9536(85)90087-5. PMID 4049004.
  15. Dick, L (February 1995). "'Pibloktoq' (Arctic Hysteria): A construction of European-Inuit relations". Arctic Anthropology. 32 (2): 2. JSTOR 40316385.
  16. Simons, R. C.; Hughes, C. C. (1985). The culture-bound syndromes: folk illnesses of psychiatric and anthropological interest. Holland: D. Reidel. pp. 275, 289. ISBN 90-277-1858-X.
  17. Kirmayer, L. J. (2007). "Cultural psychiatry in historical perspective". Textbook of cultural psychiatry. Cambridge University Press. pp. 3–19. ISBN 978-0-521-85653-9.
  18. Sidorov, P. I.; Davydov, A. N. (1992). "Ethnopsychiatric research in the national minorities of Northern Russia and Siberia". Bekhterev Review of Psychiatry and Medical Psychology. Washington. ISBN 0-88048-667-8. ISSN 1064-6930.

Further reading

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