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Fora de cena: a loucura, o obsceno e o senso comum
Author(s) -
Ángel Martínez-Hernáez
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
interthesis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1807-1384
DOI - 10.5007/1807-1384.2012v9n2p01
Subject(s) - persuasion , hegemony , common sense , state (computer science) , sociology , ethnography , psychology , epistemology , psychoanalysis , social psychology , aesthetics , political science , philosophy , law , anthropology , computer science , algorithm , politics
Throughout European history, madness has been associated with two states: movement and confinement. These apparently contradictory states converge in an obscene state, in the etymological sense of the word: offstage. In this article, based on data from ethnographic work in the Barcelona mental health care network, it is argued that "being ob-scene" results when madness challenges hegemonic social processes of inculcation and persuasion that induce acceptance of behavioral patterns considered appropriate, and lead patients to identify with the interests of therapists. Madness defies not reason, as it is widely supposed, but common sense understood as a cultural system. Its refractory nature leads to the stigmatizing management of madness in expert systems that seeks to subsume the experience of affected persons in predictable nosological categories

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