Addictive Appetites: Autophagy, Capitalism, and Mental Health

IF 0.2 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Roger Davis
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

abstract:This article examines how images of self-cannibalism, or autophagy, configure a subjectivity that emphasizes the internalization of precarious existential conditions resulting from contemporary neoliberal principles. With a focus on mental health, I argue that the combination of self-cannibalism and individual responsibility inculcates an individual rather than collective response to mental health pathologies. I demonstrate how the dominant medical model of treatment paradoxically minimizes and internalizes the social and economic factors that contribute to identity formation, and I suggest that the conventional self-other antagonism of cannibalism transforms into a new self-self antagonism. By internalizing principles of competition and self-reliance in neoliberal capitalism, the contemporary subject subscribes to the very conditions that undermine the healthy social and interactive features that define a stable community life. Autophagy shifts away from the negative associations of cannibalism and toward the positive yet paradoxical associations of autophagy as a model of self-sustainability.
上瘾的胃口:自噬、资本主义和心理健康
本文探讨了自我食人或自噬的图像如何配置一种主体性,强调当代新自由主义原则导致的不稳定生存条件的内在化。在关注心理健康的同时,我认为,自我同类相食和个人责任的结合,灌输了个体而不是集体对心理健康病理的反应。我展示了主流的医学治疗模式是如何矛盾地最小化和内化有助于身份形成的社会和经济因素的,我认为传统的同类相食的自我-他人对抗转变为一种新的自我-自我对抗。通过内化新自由主义资本主义中的竞争和自力更生原则,当代主体认同了破坏健康的社会和互动特征的条件,而这些特征定义了稳定的社区生活。自噬从同类相食的负面关联转变为作为自我维持模式的自噬的积极但矛盾的关联。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture
Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
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