The power of the notion of resistance in the mental health field: a case study on the life of rural communities whitin the Colombian armed conflict

Beatriz Elena Arias López Magíster en Educación y Desarrollo Comunitario. Doctora en Salud Mental Comunitaria. Docente, Facultad de Enfermería, Universidad de Antioquia, Medellín, Colombia
Published: 1 August 2014 Open Access
Abstract views
736
Metrics Loading ...

Abstract


The objective of this study is to identify individual, family and/or community responses of resistance within protracted armed conflict. We conducted a case study with members of rural communities in the municipality of San Francisco, in the eastern area of Antioquia, Colombia, combining biographical and ethnographical approaches. The primary results show that, along with the suffering generated by the experience of armed conflict, rural community members also display a repertoire of multiple and diverse resistance strategies. Resistance is for them an active response and a way to re-weave the fabric torn by the experience. As a type of affirmative opposition, resistance is a powerful category for the entire mental health field, in that it highlights the creativity and capacity for transformation of individuals. In this way, the category allows for overcoming the limits of the conventional biomedical view that tends to pathologize individual and social responses in scenarios of severe distress.