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Journal ArticleDOI

The Social Construction of Non-Human Agency: The Case of Mental Disorder

Darin Weinberg
- 01 May 1997 - 
- Vol. 44, Iss: 2, pp 217-234
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors draw upon the notion of social problems work to provide for the practical dynamics whereby members animate the categorical objects that they presume to populate their worlds, such that one may find members interacting with these objects much as they do with one another in the ongoing production of local affairs.
Abstract
In diverse ways, constructionist studies demonstrate the profound relevance of social processes to the emergence and assessment of mental disorders in various organizational settings. However, there remains a curious silence in the constructionist literature regarding how mental disorders, once assembled as meaningful objects of discourse and practice, might come to exercise their own causal influences upon members' experiences and activities. In this paper, I draw upon the notion of social problems work to provide for the practical dynamics whereby members, in effect, animate the categorical objects that they presume to populate their worlds. More than enacting identifiable objects of social problems discourse, social problems work at times actually realizes these objects as causally influential non-human agents, such that one may find members interacting with these objects much as they do with one another in the ongoing production of local affairs. While the analysis presented in this paper concerns the social construction of mental disorders as causally influential non-human agents, it is intended as a case study of the more general phenomenon.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nonhumans in Social Interaction

TL;DR: This article briefly review the theoretical grounds that eliminated nonhumans from studies of social interaction, and presents new theories and empirical studies that construct a role for nonhumans in social interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Sociology of the Person

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the sociological model of the person proposed by Durkheim and Mauss neglects both folk or ethnopsychologies of personhood and the interactional production of persons and draw upon the work of Goffman to develop a sociological psychology concerned with means, processes and relations of person production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk and liminality in mental health social work

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the concept of liminal otherness as an analytic tool to explain how social workers assessed the risk of clients who were "difficult to place" because of uncertainty about whether their behaviour was the result of their personality or their mental illness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning disability and the limits of liberal citizenship: interactional impediments to political empowerment.

TL;DR: An ethnographic analysis of an innovative advocacy group: the Parliament for People with Learning Disabilities (PPLD) is considered, discussing the limits of an approach to empowering learning disabled individuals that is cast too exclusively in terms drawn from liberal models of citizenship that prioritise voice over care, security, and wellbeing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sociological Perspectives on Addiction

TL;DR: A critical survey of sociological research on addiction can be found in this article, where the focus is on addiction as a putative enslavement to a substance or activity rather than merely deviant or disapproved activity more broadly.
References
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Book

The Social Construction of Reality

TL;DR: Scheleris et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a sociologijos disciplinos raida, which is a discipline for sociologists to discipline themselves in the discipline of social sciences.
Book

Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes

TL;DR: The second edition of "Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes" as discussed by the authors provides guidelines, suggestions, and practical advice for creating useful fieldnotes in a variety of settings, demystifying a process that is often assumed to be intuitive and impossible to teach.
Journal ArticleDOI

On Being Sane in Insane Places

TL;DR: It is clear that we cannot distinguish the sane from the insane in psychiatric hospitals as mentioned in this paper, and the consequences to patients hospitalized in such an environment-the powerlessness, depersonalization, segregation, mortification, and self-labeling-seem undoubtedly countertherapeutic.
Book

Constructing Social Problems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors define social problems as the claims-making activities of individuals or groups regarding social conditions they consider unjust, immoral, or harmful and that should be addressed.