Saira Mirza Manpreet Dhuffar-Pottiwal Mirza The Psychology of South Asian Shame: Mapping Caste, Colonial & Intergenerational Trauma Transmission in the Western Diaspora

The Psychology of South Asian Shame: Mapping Caste, Colonial & Intergenerational Trauma Transmission in the Western Diaspora

von Saira Mirza Manpreet Dhuffar-Pottiwal

A Contextual, Theoretical, and Clinical Guide to Decolonial Frameworks in South Asian Psychology

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Beschreibung

This book reveals shame as a political, biological, and cultural inheritance, an architecture of feeling and power that silently shapes identity, belonging, and survival across South Asian diasporas. At its core, it reframes shame through five interwoven characteristics: polarisation, hierarchy, intersectionality, weaponisation, and neuroticism, revealing how shame functions both as an emotional wound and a system of social control. It divides communities through caste and intragroup conflict; institutionalises inequality by assigning worth at birth; compounds harm through gender, colourism, class, and religion; and is wielded by dominant groups to maintain power. Internalised shame renders superiority and inferiority natural, even moral, turning difference into danger and kin into adversaries. Drawing on historical analysis, psychological theory, and cultural narrative, the book shows how shame becomes embedded in the nervous system, carried across generations, and sustained by a conspiracy of silence. Colonialism, Partition, migration, and racism shape inner worlds, producing relational wounds that continue to define South Asian families, communities, and diasporic identities. Introducing a suite of frameworks, the book offers culturally grounded psychological tools: • South Asian Typology of Attachment: how early caregiving is shaped by intergenerational shame, duty, honour, caste, and emotional suppression.• South Asian Ecological Systems theory: how trauma is transmitted through family dynamics, community expectations, caste structures, and ancestral trauma.• South Asian Acculturation theory: how identity and belonging are negotiated across borders.• Caste Trauma Transmission Model: how caste, patriarchy, supremacism, and capitalism reproduce trauma and shame across generations.• South Asian Shame Model: revealing shame as a central organising principle of emotional and relational life, shaping behaviour and culturally patterned psychopathology. Together, these frameworks move beyond Eurocentric psychology to offer a transformative account of the South Asian psyche. Ultimately, the book calls for breaking silences, challenging hierarchies, and imagining futures grounded in compassion, dignity, justice, and equity.

This book reveals shame as a political, biological, and cultural inheritance, an architecture of feeling and power that silently shapes identity, belonging, and survival across South Asian diasporas.

At its core, it reframes shame through five interwoven characteristics: polarisation, hierarchy, intersectionality, weaponisation, and neuroticism, revealing how shame functions both as an emotional wound and a system of social control. It divides communities through caste and intragroup conflict; institutionalises inequality by assigning worth at birth; compounds harm through gender, colourism, class, and religion; and is wielded by dominant groups to maintain power. Internalised shame renders superiority and inferiority natural, even moral, turning difference into danger and kin into adversaries.

Drawing on historical analysis, psychological theory, and cultural narrative, the book shows how shame becomes embedded in the nervous system, carried across generations, and sustained by a conspiracy of silence. Colonialism, Partition, migration, and racism shape inner worlds, producing relational wounds that continue to define South Asian families, communities, and diasporic identities.

Introducing a suite of frameworks, the book offers culturally grounded psychological tools:

South Asian Typology of Attachment: how early caregiving is shaped by intergenerational shame, duty, honour, caste, and emotional suppression.
South Asian Ecological Systems theory: how trauma is transmitted through family dynamics, community expectations, caste structures, and ancestral trauma.
South Asian Acculturation theory: how identity and belonging are negotiated across borders.
Caste Trauma Transmission Model: how caste, patriarchy, supremacism, and capitalism reproduce trauma and shame across generations.
South Asian Shame Model: revealing shame as a central organising principle of emotional and relational life, shaping behaviour and culturally patterned psychopathology.

Together, these frameworks move beyond Eurocentric psychology to offer a transformative account of the South Asian psyche. Ultimately, the book calls for breaking silences, challenging hierarchies, and imagining futures grounded in compassion, dignity, justice, and equity.


uniqe southeast Asia focus Clinical ramifications cultural comparisons

Autor*in

Saira Mirza

Themen in »The Psychology of South Asian Shame: Mapping Caste, Colonial & Intergenerational Trauma Transmission in the Western Diaspora«

South Asian Diaspora Shame migration hypersexuality colonialism perfectionism addiciton behaviour Cultural psychology caste

Stimmen zu »The Psychology of South Asian Shame: Mapping Caste, Colonial & Intergenerational Trauma Transmission in the Western Diaspora«

Details

ISBN: 9783032166722
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Erscheinung: 13.05.2026

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