从生物社会性到生物团结性:发现和形成以身体为中心的重复行为的社会网络的循环效应。

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Anthropology & Medicine Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Epub Date: 2021-02-22 DOI:10.1080/13648470.2020.1864807
Bridget Bradley
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引用次数: 10

摘要

对生物社会性的人类学描述揭示了通过共享生物医学条件形成的社会关系的重要性。在以身体为中心的重复行为(bfrb)的背景下,如强迫性拔毛(拔毛癖)和抠皮(拔皮癖),生物社会性使人们从孤立走向社区。诊断后,发现“你并不孤单”的强大时刻可能导致巨大的个人转变,展示诊断和生物社会性的“循环效应”。然而,生物社会群体不仅仅是存在,而且必须首先形成和发现,它们的可持续性需要生物社会行动者本身的持续工作和关心。生物社会性对不同的人也意味着不同的东西,通常需要在保密和公开之间进行协商。这篇文章承认耻辱在生物社会性中的作用,区分了私人和公共生物社会经验。它认为,通过生物社会性,可以产生生物团结行动,其中宣传可以提高对疾病群体的可见度和认可度。生物社会性和生物团结性的循环效应展示了社区行动主义和生物社会性相互复制的方式。通过人类学家的反思,生物团结被认为是一种方法论工具,可以帮助学者在该领域内外的相关性,社会性和倡导之间进行导航。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From biosociality to biosolidarity: the looping effects of finding and forming social networks for body-focused repetitive behaviours.

Anthropological accounts of biosociality reveal the importance of the social relations formed through shared biomedical conditions. In the context of body-focused repetitive behaviours (BFRBs), like compulsive hair pulling (trichotillomania) and skin picking (dermatillomania), biosociality moves people from isolation towards community. After diagnosis, the powerful moment of discovering 'you are not alone' can lead to immense personal transformations, demonstrating the 'looping effects' of diagnosis and biosociality. Yet, biosocial groups do not simply exist, and must first be formed and found and their sustainability requires ongoing work and care from biosocial actors themselves. Biosociality also means different things to different people, often requiring a negotiation between secrecy and disclosure. This article acknowledges the role of stigma in biosociality, differentiating between private and public biosocial experiences. It argues that through biosociality come acts of biosolidarity, where advocacy can improve the visibility and recognition of illness groups. The circular looping effects of biosociality and biosolidarity demonstrate the way that community activism and biosociality reproduce one another. Through reflections from the anthropologist, biosolidarity is considered as a methodological tool that can help scholars to navigate the boundaries between relatedness, sociality and advocacy in the field and beyond.

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CiteScore
2.90
自引率
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