In her role as devoted wife, the Hindu goddess Parvati is the divine embodiment of viraha, the agony of separation from one’s beloved, a form of love that is also intense suffering. These contradictory emotions reflect the overlapping dissolutions of love, family, and mental health explored by 2000 IDRF Fellow Sarah Pinto in this visceral ethnography.

Daughters of Parvati centers on the lives of women in different settings of psychiatric care in northern India, particularly the contrasting environments of a private mental health clinic and a wing of a government hospital. Through an anthropological consideration of modern medicine in a nonwestern setting, Pinto challenges the dominant framework for addressing crises such as long-term involuntary commitment, poor treatment in homes, scarcity of licensed practitioners, heavy use of pharmaceuticals, and the ways psychiatry may reproduce constraining social conditions. Inflected by the author’s own experience of separation and single motherhood during her fieldwork, Daughters of Parvati urges us to think about the ways women bear the consequences of the vulnerabilities of love and family in their minds, bodies, and social worlds. Buy it on Amazon.

Awarded the 2014 Eileen Basker Memorial Prize by the Society for Medical Anthropology division of the American Anthropological Association

Publication Details

Title
Daughters of Parvati Women and Madness in Contemporary India
Authors
Pinto, Sarah K.
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania / University of Pennsylvania Press
Publish Date
2014
ISBN
9780812245837
Citation
Pinto, Sarah K., Daughters of Parvati Women and Madness in Contemporary India (University of Pennsylvania / University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014).
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