(Ng)amukRevisited

Emotional Expression and Mental Illness in Central Java, Indonesia

  • Browne, Kevin
Transcultural Psychiatry 38(2):p 147-165, June 2001. | DOI: 10.1177/136346150103800201

Researchers of ‘amuk’ behavior in Southeast Asia have normally adopted either a psychiatric or ethno-behavioral position, both of which impose an outside theoretical model. An ethnopsychological view of (ng)amuk in Java reveals it to be a poetic idiom of distress, reflecting cultural anxieties about mental illness, aggression, loss of control and vulnerability of the self. Ngamuk as mental/social suffering in Java occurs in a political context that promotes strong repression of emotion and dissent. A model of ngamuk as an exegesis of mental/social distress, reflecting everyday experiences of anxiety, vulnerability, danger and transgression, is proposed.

Copyright © 2001 Sage Publications