
New Books Network Nikita Kaur Simpson, "Tension: Mental Distress and Embodied Inequality in the Western Himalayas" (Duke UP, 2026)
Mar 29, 2026
Nikita Kaur Simpson, a medical anthropologist who studied the Gaddi people of the Western Himalayas. She explores the local concept of “tension” and how it links bodily symptoms to rapid social change. Short, vivid stories show gendered, household, and structural dimensions of distress. The conversation traces fieldwork methods, cultural metaphors, and how tension circulates across lives.
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Tension As A Polysemic Lens
- Tension is a polysemic local term linking bodily and mental complaints to intimate and structural change.
- Nikita Kaur Simpson first noticed it among young women after the Nirbhaya case while studying gendered effects of legal and social shifts.
Tension Connects Structural Change To Lived Bodies
- Gaddi people use tension to theorize how livelihood, kinship, and environmental changes sediment in bodies and relationships.
- The term spans historical psychiatric usage to everyday atmosphere, opening ethnographic inquiry into embodied inequality.
Learn To Listen To Atmospheres Not Just Words
- Learn to 'listen' to tension by training sensory attunement to atmospheres, gestures, and pauses.
- Combine embodied noticing with household surveys, genealogies, and archives to contextualize what those atmospheres mean.

