How risk is shared: an interview with Anne McGuire

IF 0.7 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Francis Russell, A. Mcguire
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT This interview was conducted via email in late 2020 in preparation for Lockdown: Mental Illness, Wellness, and COVID-19, a three-day online conference organised by myself, Madison Magladry (Curtin University), Debra Shaw (University of East London), and Jeremy Gilbert (University of East London). Anne McGuire had agreed to speak as a keynote, but time differences between Western Australia and Canada made even a Zoom call keynote impractical (the difficulties of syncing Zoom sessions and time zones became one of the many new problems of academic life in 2020). Accordingly, McGuire very kindly agreed to respond to my questions via email, the results of which were subsequently published in the conference catalogue, and served as a platform for a panel discussion on the final day, which included Will Davies (Goldsmiths), Stephanie Alice Baker (City, University of London), and Jeremy Gilbert. I had become aware of McGuire’s work through my own research on neoliberal mental healthcare and the newly emerging logics of spectrality that could be detected in institutional psychiatry’s interest in dimensions of health, illness, and comorbidity, and in the popular discourses around the ‘mental health spectrum’. As an academic working in disability studies, McGuire’s work on ‘mental illness’ (or madness, as many would prefer) is thought provoking and productive in its capacity to reassess contemporary institutional and discursive reformulations of health, sanity, and normality—and, furthermore, how these reformulations are irreducibly linked to the disempowerment and exploitation of the mad. McGuire’s work took on a new significance for me in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent global lockdowns, and with the emerging global discussion of the necessity of a more positive stance on tele-health and digital platforms for ‘sufferers’ of ‘mental illnesses’. Her capacity to show how supposedly novel and progressive forms of psychopathology and care—such as the notion of the mental health spectrum, which purportedly moves us beyond stigmatising notions of abnormality—reproduce hierarchies and social injustice, was incredibly helpful for negotiating the rhetoric of ‘the new normal’ that pervaded 2020. It was in the attempt to locate the meaning of the ‘new normal’ for those circumscribed within the institutions and discourses of ‘mental illness’—i.e., the reinvention of existing norms, inequalities, and injustices both in response to, and in some instances by way of the COVID-19 pandemic—that I turned to, and continue to turn to, McGuire’s work.
如何分担风险:对安妮·麦奎尔的采访
本次采访是在2020年底通过电子邮件进行的,目的是为“禁闭:精神疾病、健康和COVID-19”做准备。这是一个为期三天的在线会议,由我、麦迪逊·马格拉德里(科廷大学)、黛布拉·肖(东伦敦大学)和杰里米·吉尔伯特(东伦敦大学)共同组织。安妮·麦圭尔(Anne McGuire)同意作为主题演讲,但西澳大利亚州和加拿大的时差使Zoom call主题演讲变得不切实际(同步Zoom会议和时区的困难成为2020年学术生活的许多新问题之一)。因此,McGuire非常友好地同意通过电子邮件回复我的问题,其结果随后发表在会议目录中,并在最后一天作为小组讨论的平台,包括Will Davies (Goldsmiths), Stephanie Alice Baker (City, University of London)和Jeremy Gilbert。我通过自己对新自由主义精神卫生保健的研究,以及在机构精神病学对健康、疾病和共病维度的兴趣以及围绕“精神健康谱”的流行论述中,可以发现新出现的频谱性逻辑,从而意识到McGuire的工作。作为一名从事残疾研究的学者,McGuire关于“精神疾病”(或疯狂,正如许多人所喜欢的那样)的研究发人深省,富有成效,因为它重新评估了当代对健康、理智和正常的制度性和话语性重新表述,而且,这些重新表述是如何与对疯子的剥夺和剥削不可避免地联系在一起的。在2019冠状病毒病大流行和随后的全球封锁之后,随着全球正在讨论对“精神疾病”“患者”的远程医疗和数字平台采取更积极立场的必要性,McGuire的工作对我来说具有新的意义。她展示了所谓的新颖和进步的精神病理学和护理形式——比如精神健康谱系的概念,据称它使我们超越了对异常的污名化概念——是如何再现等级制度和社会不公正的,这对讨论2020年普遍存在的“新常态”的修辞非常有帮助。它试图为那些被限制在“精神疾病”的制度和话语中的人定位“新常态”的意义。在应对COVID-19大流行的过程中,以及在某些情况下通过COVID-19大流行对现有规范、不平等和不公正的重新创造,这是我转向并将继续转向麦圭尔的作品的原因。
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来源期刊
Culture Theory and Critique
Culture Theory and Critique HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
25.00%
发文量
6
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