Managing Chineseness: neurasthenia and psychiatry in Taiwan in the second half of the twentieth century

The present study investigates the role of Taiwanese psychiatrists in turning neurasthenia into a culture-specific disease in the late twentieth century. It first delineates the shift in both explanatory models of psychoneuroses and patient population in post-World War II Taiwan. Neurasthenia became...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inHistory of psychiatry Vol. 33; no. 3; pp. 263 - 278
Main Author Wang, Wen-Ji
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London, England SAGE Publications 01.09.2022
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Summary:The present study investigates the role of Taiwanese psychiatrists in turning neurasthenia into a culture-specific disease in the late twentieth century. It first delineates the shift in both explanatory models of psychoneuroses and patient population in post-World War II Taiwan. Neurasthenia became a focus of international attention in the 1970s and 1980s with the advance of cultural psychiatry, and, as China was closed to the outside world, Taiwanese psychiatrists were influential in framing the cultural meaning of neurasthenia. With the rise of post-socialist China, Taiwan lost its status as a key laboratory of Chinese studies. This paper argues that the history of neurasthenia during the period was closely associated with the professional development and national identity of Taiwanese psychiatrists.
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ISSN:0957-154X
1740-2360
DOI:10.1177/0957154X221087410