scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessMonographDOI

Towards a sociology of schizophrenia : humanistic reflections

Keith Doubt
- 31 Jan 1996 - 
- Vol. 29, Iss: 6, pp 864
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Keith Doubt presents a critique of society's neglect of the mentally ill and promotes a humanistic understanding of the affected person as a social being in this thought-provoking survey of the literature on schizophrenia.
Abstract
Schizophrenia, at one time considered by many clinicians to be a psychological response to an oppressive upbringing, is now generally accepted as a physical illness. While Keith Doubt does not quarrel with this current view, he does challenge the positivist assumptions that tend to accompany it. Throughout this fascinating survey of the literature on schizophrenia, Doubt presents a critique of society's neglect of the mentally ill and promotes a humanistic understanding of the affected person as a social being. Doubt draws on several disciplines and uses the works of such diverse writers as Vygotsky, Piaget, Deleuze, Laing, and Torrey. While he rebukes medical practitioners for ignoring the social dimensions of schizophrenia, he is equally critical of post-modernism's tendency to valorize the mentally ill. Nor does he sympathize with particular sociological approaches which, he believes, emphasize society's reactions to the illness - often at the expense of the afflicted person. Thus, a major part of Doubt's project is to place the individual at the centre of sociological theorizing about schizophrenia. This thought-provoking study offers an alternative perspective on schizophrenia to scholars and professionals, as well as to those who live with the disease. Doubt offers practical recommendations, which he hopes will bring some relief to sufferers, and helpful insights to those engaged in treating or assisting people with schizophrenia.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Re-awakenings? A discourse analysis of the recovery from schizophrenia after medication change.

TL;DR: This paper suggests how such analysis of people living with schizophrenia opens up for exploration of the silencing of 'insanity', and establishes a beginning dialogue with people who live with the continuing presence of schizophrenia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Central secession: towards a new analytical concept? The case of former Yugoslavia

TL;DR: In the case of the break-up of Yugoslavia, the rhetoric was adamantly unitarian, anti-secessionist, even anti-nationalist and emphasised the defence of territorial integrity at all costs as mentioned in this paper.
Dissertation

Experiences Labelled Psychotic: A Settler’s Autoethnography beyond Psychosic Narrative

Erick Fabris
TL;DR: In this article, a White Italian male settler living on Turtle Island brings survivor experience to psychiatric definitions of "psychosis" or what I call psychosic narrative, and to broader literatures for the purpose of decolonizing mental relations.
Book ChapterDOI

Medicine and the Phenomenological Method

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that phenomenology can serve the medical profession by providing a different way of looking at medical theory and practice, a way that is grounded in both philosophy and lived experience.
Trending Questions (1)
Is Pete Davidson mentally challenged?

While he rebukes medical practitioners for ignoring the social dimensions of schizophrenia, he is equally critical of post-modernism's tendency to valorize the mentally ill.