Buch, Englisch, 272 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 233 mm, Gewicht: 658 g
Self/Perceptions Within the Medical Encounter
Buch, Englisch, 272 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 233 mm, Gewicht: 658 g
Reihe: Routledge Research in Gender and Society
ISBN: 978-1-032-66014-1
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
This book explores the notions of violence, care, and cure within the medical encounter and seeks to foreground the ways in which, whether individually or as a triad, they are prone to ambiguous interpretations. The chapters of this book attend to the complex interlacing of these three key terms and what to make of their entanglement by offering historical, practical, philosophical, personal, and aesthetic analyses of different medical scenes, objects, and concepts.
Besides the three main concepts that give the collection its title, the volume deals with bodily experience, medical neglect or scepticism, pain and suffering, diagnosis and recovery, and epistemic injustice, through the lens of, among others, biopolitics, ethics, gender medicine, and critical medical humanities. Altogether, the chapters pay particular attention to the role of images and other narratives, including social media platforms. The case studies in this collection invite the reader to observe medical encounters that take place in and are shaped by a variety of both material and ‘immaterial’ spaces, from the consulting room to the antechamber of medical bureaucracy, and from artistic venues to biopolitical discourses. Taken together, this book argues that a hermeneutic of violence, care, and cure is inseparable from individual and collective perceptions of the medical encounter; that is, it is inextricable from an understanding of the tensions and consensus that surge among perceptions orchestrated by both internal (subjective) and external (social, cultural, political) ‘gazes’. Moreover, the volume aims to provide, both directly and indirectly, a meta-eflection on the disciplines that fall under the umbrella of ‘medical and health humanities’, interrogating the field’s potential to unearth systemic bias, to open different possibilities of existence, and to make visible the complexity of its research objects, as well as to caution against their possible pitfalls.
By bringing together different methodological approaches, this volume provides its readers with conceptual resources for thinking about the intersections of violence, care, and cure. By providing a space where the voices of both emerging and established scholars mingle and respond to one another, this book will be essential reading for anyone across the social sciences and humanities interested in the sociology of health and medicine, the medical humanities, and gender studies.
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie | Soziale Arbeit Soziologie Allgemein
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Geschichte der Westlichen Philosophie Westliche Philosophie: Transzendentalphilosophie, Kritizismus
- Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie | Soziale Arbeit Soziale Gruppen/Soziale Themen Gender Studies, Geschlechtersoziologie
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction: Violence, Care, Cure: (Self-)Perceptions Within the Medical Encounter Musing 1: Narrative Medicine, Racial Justice and The Black Maternal Mortality Crisis Part 1: Medical Histories and Biopolitics 2. Touching Matters of Care: A Visual Approach to Care and Violence in Dr Marie Stopes’ Birth Control Campaign 3. Politics In the Time of Cholera: COVID, Table Manners, and Bio-Politics 4. Bio-Story: Michel Foucault and The History of Social Medicine Musing 2: Counteracting Psychiatric Violence Through Critical Heritage Studies and Cooperation Part 2: Unsettling and Working Through Practices and Languages of Cure 5. The ‘Interpretation Workshop’ As Artistic Research: A Methodological Approach to Original Biographical National Socialist Writings 6. ‘The Way Out Is Via the Door’: R.D. Laing and the Cure from The Family 7. ‘Io Sono Matta’: Psychiatric Violence, Militant Madness, and Sexual Difference in Alberto Grifi’s ‘Anthropology of Disobedience’ 8. The Denied Poetics of Global Psychiatry and Frantz Fanon’s Poetisation of Science Musing 3: Fanon, Epistemic Injustice, and the Colonial Medical Encounter Part 3: Agency in Illness and Ethics of Suffering 9. Narrative Autonomy to The Test of Illness 10. Plumbing The Perpetual Loss of Paradise: Susan Taubes and Sacred Suffering 11. Almodóvar’s Anatomies Musing 4: On Care and Violence in Medical Humanities Research Collaborations Part 4: Anatomy of a Transformation 12. T For Trans: An Outraged Investigation of Non-Binary Medical Transition in Germany 13. I Am Not My MRI 14. Surprised By the Night: On the Traversal of a Dysphoric Phantasy 15. Afterword: Moral Value in Medicine: Violence, Cure, and Care