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Transcultural Psychiatry
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Asklepian Dreams: The Ethos of the Wounded-Healer in the Clinical Encounter

Laurence J. Kirmayer

McGill University, laurence.kirmayer{at}mcgill.ca

The clinical encounter is structured hierarchically: explicit technical action is embedded in levels of organization that reflect the personality and biography of the clinician, which in turn, are embedded in a larger matrix of cultural values or ethos. Systems of medicine can be compared at each of these levels. Shamanism and other elementary systems of medicine are built on an ethos that identifies healers’ calling, authority and effectiveness with their own initiatory illness experiences. The Asklepian religious cults of ancient Greece also drew from the image of the wounded-healer. This essay argues that ethos of the wounded-healer remains relevant to contemporary medicine, psychiatry and psychotherapy. Developmental changes in the relationship of the healer to his wounds during psychiatric training are illustrated by a series of dreams. The ethos of the wounded-healer has implications for the training of clinicians, as well as for the ethics and pragmatics of clinical work.

Key Words: doctor-patient interaction • ethics • Jungian psychology • myth • psychotherapy • training

Transcultural Psychiatry, Vol. 40, No. 2, 248-277 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/1363461503402007


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