自我保健的想象空间:学生心理健康希望的推测未来。

IF 2 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Loa Gordon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

最近的人种学研究将自我保健作为一种社会驱动的护理配置进行了调查。本分析结合了关于想象力的理论,揭示了心理健康案例中自我保健的新的社会维度,即体现性和公共性。本文基于对加拿大各所大学的实地调查,以及与学生、校园健康服务提供者和一群试图了解学生心理健康治疗选择的精神病流行病学家的对话,探讨了这些不同的主体是如何激活我所说的自我保健想象力的。在加拿大的年轻人中,越来越多的社会弊病在治疗上无法解释,他们通过游戏和世界构建将自我保健的形式转移到了想象中,这对物质治疗和推测治疗之间的区别提出了挑战。关注自我保健的想象力层面,可以使年轻人在一个体现为阻碍康复的世界中抓住希望的方式变得连贯起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The imaginarium of self-care: Speculative futures of hope for student mental health

Recent ethnographies have investigated self-care as a socially driven configuration of care. This analysis engages theorizing on the imagination to expose new social dimensions of self-care in cases of mental health as embodied and communal. Based on fieldwork across Canadian universities and in conversation with students, campus wellness providers, and a group of psychiatric epidemiologists seeking to understand the mental health treatment choices of students, this article examines how these different subjects activate what I call an imaginarium of self-care. Among young adults in Canada, mounting social ills that go therapeutically unaccounted for have relocated forms of self-care into the imagination through play and world-building in ways that challenge the distinction between material and speculative healing. Attending to the imaginative dimensions of self-care makes coherent the ways that young people are grasping for hope in a world that—when embodied—resists recovery.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.50%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: Medical Anthropology Quarterly: International Journal for the Analysis of Health publishes research and theory in the field of medical anthropology. This broad field views all inquiries into health and disease in human individuals and populations from the holistic and cross-cultural perspective distinctive of anthropology as a discipline -- that is, with an awareness of species" biological, cultural, linguistic, and historical uniformity and variation. It encompasses studies of ethnomedicine, epidemiology, maternal and child health, population, nutrition, human development in relation to health and disease, health-care providers and services, public health, health policy, and the language and speech of health and health care.
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