Domestic Moods: Maternal Mental Health in Northern Vietnam

    5 Citationer (Scopus)

    Abstract

    In this article I propose the notion of domestic mood as an important
    concept for mental health research. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork
    conducted among women living in Hanoi, Vietnam, I explore the maternal
    mental health problems that the women reported, focusing particularly on
    the household tensions and conflicts that made the entry into motherhood
    a distressful experience. To develop the concept of domestic mood, I draw
    on Martin Heidegger’s work, particularly his claim that human being is
    always a being-with. Comprehending maternal mental health problems, I
    argue, requires that we pay attention not only to individual states of mind,
    but also to the ways that domestic environments shape people’s moods.
    Taking this analytical approach, I show how the mental health states of
    pregnant women and new mothers in Vietnam were inseparable from their
    husbands’ structural vulnerabilities within kin groups.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftMedical Anthropology
    Vol/bind37
    Udgave nummer7
    Sider (fra-til)582-596
    ISSN0145-9740
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - 3 okt. 2018

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