Cartoons by Australian Consumers of Mental Health Services: Fighting Stigma, Questioning Normality, and Presenting Alternate Perspectives

IF 0.4 Q3 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Hans Pols, Ruah Potaris Grace
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:Subversive humour, expressed in jokes, satire, ridicule, cartoons, and short stories, is articulated by marginalised social groups to criticise power hierarchies and repressive social conventions. In protest movements, humour builds and solidifies personal and collective identities and solidarities by realising temporary and symbolic reversals of power. Among individuals with a lived experience of mental distress, humour may express dissatisfaction with mental health services, problematise stigma, question normality, and provide alternative perspectives. This article analyses cartoons by Merinda Epstein and Sandy Watson, and their function in the first decades of the Australian consumer movement.
澳大利亚心理健康服务消费者的漫画:与耻辱作斗争,质疑正常,并提出不同的观点
摘要:颠覆性幽默以笑话、讽刺、调侃、漫画和短篇小说的形式表达,被边缘化的社会团体用来批评权力等级制度和压制性的社会习俗。在抗议运动中,幽默通过实现权力的暂时和象征性逆转,建立并巩固了个人和集体的身份和团结。在经历过精神痛苦的人中,幽默可能会表达对心理健康服务的不满,使污名化,质疑正常性,并提供其他视角。本文分析了Merinda Epstein和Sandy Watson的漫画,以及它们在澳大利亚消费者运动最初几十年中的作用。
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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