Deviance and Medicalization, from Badness to Sickness"The subject of this book is the gradual social transformation of deviance designations in American society from "badness" to "sickness." This has been the most profound change in the definition of deviance in the past two centuries. By examining the medicalization (and demedicalization) of deviance in American society, we may also investigate the general sociohistorical process of defining deviance. Thus this book has a dual focus: it is a historical and sociological inquiry into the changing definitions of deviance and an analysis of the transformation from religious and criminal to medical designations and control of deviance." -- preface. |
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In light of the socially constructed nature of both crime and illness , it should not
be surprising to find that there has been a fluidity or drift between designations of
crime deviations and illness deviations . One of the major concerns of this book is
...
In light of the socially constructed nature of both crime and illness , it should not
be surprising to find that there has been a fluidity or drift between designations of
crime deviations and illness deviations . One of the major concerns of this book is
...
˹éÒ 224
In attempting to explain why biological explanations of crime were so
enthusiastically met at the turn of the 19th century , Lindesmith and Levin ( 1937 )
pointed to their ideological efficacy : For more than a century before criminal
anthropology ...
In attempting to explain why biological explanations of crime were so
enthusiastically met at the turn of the 19th century , Lindesmith and Levin ( 1937 )
pointed to their ideological efficacy : For more than a century before criminal
anthropology ...
˹éÒ 227
265 ) theorists point to epilepsy as a cause of crime . Lombroso believed that
epilepsy was the “ bond that unites . . . the moral imbecile ( the insane criminal ]
and the born criminal in the same natural family ” ( Wolfgang , 1960 , p . 188 ) .
265 ) theorists point to epilepsy as a cause of crime . Lombroso believed that
epilepsy was the “ bond that unites . . . the moral imbecile ( the insane criminal ]
and the born criminal in the same natural family ” ( Wolfgang , 1960 , p . 188 ) .
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Deviance definitions and the medical profession | 1 |
Social control | 7 |
Overview of the book | 16 |
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Deviance and Medicalization: From Badness to Sickness Peter Conrad,Joseph W. Schneider ªÁºÒ§Êèǹ¢Í§Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í - 2010 |
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