Black Skin, White Coats: Nigerian Psychiatrists, Decolonization, and the Globalization of Psychiatry

Black Skin, White Coats: Nigerian Psychiatrists, Decolonization, and the Globalization of Psychiatry

by Matthew M. Heaton
Black Skin, White Coats: Nigerian Psychiatrists, Decolonization, and the Globalization of Psychiatry

Black Skin, White Coats: Nigerian Psychiatrists, Decolonization, and the Globalization of Psychiatry

by Matthew M. Heaton

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Overview

Black Skin, White Coats is a history of psychiatry in Nigeria from the 1950s to the 1980s. Working in the contexts of decolonization and anticolonial nationalism, Nigerian psychiatrists sought to replace racist colonial psychiatric theories about the psychological inferiority of Africans with a universal and egalitarian model focusing on broad psychological similarities across cultural and racial boundaries. Particular emphasis is placed on Dr. T. Adeoye Lambo, the first indigenous Nigerian to earn a specialty degree in psychiatry in the United Kingdom in 1954. Lambo returned to Nigeria to become the medical superintendent of the newly founded Aro Mental Hospital in Abeokuta, Nigeria's first "modern" mental hospital. At Aro, Lambo began to revolutionize psychiatric research and clinical practice in Nigeria, working to integrate "modern" western medical theory and technologies with "traditional" cultural understandings of mental illness. Lambo's research focused on deracializing psychiatric thinking and redefining mental illness in terms of a model of universal human similarities that crossed racial and cultural divides.

Black Skin, White Coats is the first work to focus primarily on black Africans as producers of psychiatric knowledge and as definers of mental illness in their own right. By examining the ways that Nigerian psychiatrists worked to integrate their psychiatric training with their indigenous backgrounds and cultural and civic nationalisms, Black Skin, White Coats provides a foil to Frantz Fanon's widely publicized reactionary articulations of the relationship between colonialism and psychiatry. Black Skin, White Coats is also on the cutting edge of histories of psychiatry that are increasingly drawing connections between local and national developments in late-colonial and postcolonial settings and international scientific networks. Heaton argues that Nigerian psychiatrists were intimately aware of the need to engage in international discourses as part and parcel of the transformation of psychiatry at home.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780821420706
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Publication date: 10/15/2013
Series: New African Histories
Edition description: 1
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Matthew M. Heaton is an assistant professor in the Department of History at Virginia Tech.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction: Colonizing, Decolonizing, and Globalizing the History of Psychiatry 1

Chapter 1 Colonial Institutions and Networks of Ethnopsychiatry 29

Chapter 2 Decolonizing Psychiatric Institutions and Networks 51

Chapter 3 Mentally Ill Nigerian Immigrants in the United Kingdom: The International Dimensions of Decolonizing Psychiatry 79

Chapter 4 Schizophrenia, Depression, and "Brain-Fag Syndrome": Diagnosis and the Boundaries of Culture 104

Chapter 5 Gatekeepers of the Mind: Psychotherapy and "Traditional" Healers 131

Chapter 6 The Paradoxes of Psychoactive Drugs 161

Conclusion Nigerian Psychiatrists and the Globalization of Psychiatry 184

Notes 199

Bibliography 229

Index 245

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