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Transcultural Psychiatry, Vol. 35, No. 1, 5-38 (1998)
DOI: 10.1177/136346159803500101

The Medicalization of Exotic Deviance: A Sociological Perspective on Epidemic Koro

Robert E. Bartholomew

James Cook University of North Queensland

The premise of this article holds that the typification of individual koro as a medical syndrome has been inappropriately applied to collective episodes, and that based on an examination of their characteristic features koro epidemics should be reclassified as a sociological phenomenon involving mass social delusions. There is neither consistent nor compelling evidence to indicate that participants of collective episodes are psychologically disturbed or exhibiting somatoform reactions, but are experiencing the physiological consequences of anxiety generated by a false belief, and the cognitive consequences of altered perceptual sets. The misclassification of epidemic koro appears to be based on the fantastic, implausible nature of the participants' beliefs per se relative to Eurocentric social realities, and alienated from its local context and meaning.

Key Words: koro • mass psychology • medicalization of deviance • phenomenological study • sociological aspects


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