Deviance and Medicalization: From Badness to SicknessTemple University Press, 20 àÁ.Â. 2010 - 352 ˹éÒ This classic text on the nature of deviance, originally published in 1980, is now reissued with a new Afterword by the authors. In this new edition of their award-winning book, Conrad and Schneider investigate the origins and contemporary consequences of the medicalization of deviance. They examine specific cases—madness, alcoholism, opiate addiction, homosexuality, delinquency, and child abuse—and draw out their theoretical and policy implications. In a new chapter, the authors address developments in the last decade—including AIDS, domestic violence, co-dependency, hyperactivity in children, and learning disabilities—and they discuss the fate of medicalization in the 1990s with the changes in medicine and continued restrictions on social services. |
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¼Å¡Òäé¹ËÒ 1 - 5 ¨Ò¡ 53
˹éÒ vi
... cultural and social framework within which public problems and public issues are discussed . History is , at least here , also a relativizing device . It gives distance and strangeness to what is otherwise seen as near and familiar ...
... cultural and social framework within which public problems and public issues are discussed . History is , at least here , also a relativizing device . It gives distance and strangeness to what is otherwise seen as near and familiar ...
˹éÒ ix
... cultures , groups , and human interests . * The implications of sociological irony for public problems are vastly significant . The in- tervention of science into human affairs has car- ried the hope that human problems might be ...
... cultures , groups , and human interests . * The implications of sociological irony for public problems are vastly significant . The in- tervention of science into human affairs has car- ried the hope that human problems might be ...
˹éÒ 1
... cultural heritage , and the process itself can be traced through the workings of specific peo- ple , events , ideas , and techniques . We believe that , aside from its technical and intellectual as- pects , this change is surely ...
... cultural heritage , and the process itself can be traced through the workings of specific peo- ple , events , ideas , and techniques . We believe that , aside from its technical and intellectual as- pects , this change is surely ...
˹éÒ 6
... cultural elite in classical Greece , but in America such conduct is condemned and stig- matized . Suicide is considered deviant and un- godly in most of the Christian world , whereas in Imperial Japan it could be an honorable act . The ...
... cultural elite in classical Greece , but in America such conduct is condemned and stig- matized . Suicide is considered deviant and un- godly in most of the Christian world , whereas in Imperial Japan it could be an honorable act . The ...
˹éÒ 7
... culturally relative . De- viance is socially created by rule making and enforcement , usually by powerful groups over people in less powerful positions . SOCIAL CONTROL Social control is a central and important con- cept in sociology ...
... culturally relative . De- viance is socially created by rule making and enforcement , usually by powerful groups over people in less powerful positions . SOCIAL CONTROL Social control is a central and important con- cept in sociology ...
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1 | |
17 | |
38 | |
drunkenness Inebriety and the disease concept | 73 |
the fall and rise of medical Involvement | 110 |
delinquency hyperactivity and child abuse | 145 |
from sin to sickness to lifestyle | 172 |
the search for the born criminal and the medical control of criminality | 215 |
consequences for society | 241 |
10 A theoretical statement on the medlcalization of deviance | 261 |
a decade later | 277 |
Bibliography | 293 |
Author Index | 311 |
Subject Index | 317 |
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Deviance and Medicalization: From Badness to Sickness Peter Conrad,Joseph W. Schneider ªÁºÒ§Êèǹ¢Í§Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í - 1992 |
Deviance and Medicalization, from Badness to Sickness Peter Conrad,Joseph W. Schneider ÁØÁÁͧÍÂèÒ§ÂèÍ - 1980 |
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19th century alco alcohol Alcoholics Anonymous American argued asylum became become cause Chapter child abuse claims-making clinics condition court crime criminal crusade cultural cure defined delinquency devi deviance designations deviant behavior deviant drinking diagnosis disease concept disorder dominant drinker drug Freud Harrison Act havior heroin holism homosexuality human hyperactive hyperkinesis ical individual insane institutions Jellinek juvenile Kittrie label madness male medi medical definitions medical model medical practice medical problem medical profession medical social control medicalization of deviance medicine ment mental health mental hospitals mental illness methadone maintenance moral narcotics opiate addiction opium organization patients persons perspective physi physical physicians political Press professional programs psychiatry psychosurgery published punishment response role same-sex conduct scientific sexual sick sick role Social Prob social problems society sociological sociologists Szasz theory therapeutic therapy Thomas Szasz tion treat York