Narratives of the body and history: illness in judgement on the Soviet past |
Journal/Book: Sociol Health Ill. 1999; 21: 108 Cowley Rd, Oxford Ox4 1Jf, Oxon, England. Blackwell Publ Ltd. 310-328.
Abstract: This paper focuses on the narrative of a Latvian countrywoman. In so doing it explores the unstable relationship between history, memory and the body. In particular, it looks at the way in which certain historical events have come to be annexed to the body and are used to explain the development of psychological and mental illness. This account describes state-perpetrated violence, and connects individual ills to a shared history and collective suffering. My informant offered her life story as testimony to the violence and injustice of past experience. The attempt to channel political discontent by the generous provision of medical diagnostic categories is unsuccessful. Rather, bodily experience plays a central role as a yardstick against which the unreasonableness of history is judged.
Note: Article Skultans V, Univ Bristol, Div Psychiat, 41 St Michaels Hill, Bristol BS28, Avon, ENGLAND
Keyword(s): illness; memory; narrative; testimony; body; collective suffering; Latvia; CONSTRUCTION; EXPERIENCE
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