The issue of the rich and complex relationships between migration and mental health is both fascinating and enlightening as the various chapters in this book highlight most effectively. Culture, context, trauma, social dissonance and dislocation all have important corollaries within the lives of those who, for whatever reason, find themselves transported from a place of homeliness and security to a space wherein home needs to be created and recreated rather than simply dwelt within. The rebuilding of our sense of home can be difficult and traumatic in terms of mental health and ill health. All of that is in some senses a given. What is less obvious however is precisely what is meant when we talk about ‘mental illness’. The nature of mental illness is highly contested, so the suggestion that migrants can or will encounter it is also inevitably contested.
CITATION STYLE
Swinton, J. (2016). Unravelling ‘Mental Illness’: What Exactly Are We Talking About? In Mental Health in Historical Perspective (pp. 21–35). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-52968-8_2
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.