Deviance and Medicalization, from Badness to SicknessMosby, 1980 - 311 ˹éÒ "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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˹éÒ 11
... moral sphere , making them advocates for moral positions that had only peripheral rela- tions to medical practice . Not infrequently these reformers sought to change people's val- ues or to impose a set of particular values on others or ...
... moral sphere , making them advocates for moral positions that had only peripheral rela- tions to medical practice . Not infrequently these reformers sought to change people's val- ues or to impose a set of particular values on others or ...
˹éÒ 23
... moral righteousness that prompted the bureau's efforts in promoting the antimarijuana legislation ( the fact that most states already had some type of antimarijuana laws supports his interpretation ) . In either case , however , it ap ...
... moral righteousness that prompted the bureau's efforts in promoting the antimarijuana legislation ( the fact that most states already had some type of antimarijuana laws supports his interpretation ) . In either case , however , it ap ...
˹éÒ 46
... moral uniformity and social degradation " ( Foucault , 1965 , p . 208 ) . In Foucault's terms Pinel's asylum was a religious domain without a religion ; a moral force for socializing people to values of bourgeois society - obedience ...
... moral uniformity and social degradation " ( Foucault , 1965 , p . 208 ) . In Foucault's terms Pinel's asylum was a religious domain without a religion ; a moral force for socializing people to values of bourgeois society - obedience ...
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Deviance definitions and the medical profession | 1 |
changing designations of deviance | 17 |
Deviance illness and medicalization | 28 |
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Deviance and Medicalization: From Badness to Sickness Peter Conrad,Joseph W. Schneider ªÁºÒ§Êèǹ¢Í§Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í - 1992 |
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accepted activities addiction alcohol American analysis appears approach argued Association attempt became become behavior believed called cause century chapter child child abuse claims clinics concept concern condition conduct considered court created crime criminal critics cultural cure defined definitions delinquency designations deviance deviant behavior discussion disease dominant drinking drug early effects emerged evidence example exist fact groups homosexual hospitals human idea important increased individual institutions interest involved largely less madness major means medicine ment mental illness methadone moral nature opiate opium organization particular patients persons physical physicians political practice present problem profession professional programs psychiatric published punishment question recent response result role scientific seen sexual sick social control society specific success suggests theory tion treat treatment United York