Madness and Social Representations: Living with the Mad in One French Community

Madness and Social Representations: Living with the Mad in One French Community
ISBN-10
0520078659
ISBN-13
9780520078659
Category
Social Science
Pages
316
Language
English
Published
1991-01-01
Publisher
Univ of California Press
Author
Denise Jodelet

Description

A striking account of a colony for the mentally ill that forces a reconsideration of madness in society. What happens when the mentally ill are not isolated from society but are instead welcomed into it and invited to take a place in the fabric of the community? Are fear and rejection replaced by the understanding and sympathy often engendered by familiarity? Or are the barriers between the sane and the mad only strengthened? We have experienced a taste of this scenario in the U.S. in the last decade with the new emphasis on de-institutionalization, but Denise Jodelet takes us to an extraordinary community in France where the mentally ill have assumed a visible and prominent role for more than seventy years. The small French town of Ainay-le-Chteau and its environs are the site of a "family colony" for men, established in 1900. Here the patients ("lodgers") live with ordinary families ("foster parents"), hold jobs, and are free to move about the countryside. Jodelet's chronicle of daily life in the colony is made rich and vivid by extensive ethnographic material as she unravels a complex set of relationships, ultimately finding that while some of the barriers between the "other" and the larger society have been overcome, new ones have arisen in their place. This unique social experiment provides invaluable social and cultural insights, illuminating many fundamental issues in psychology, psychiatry, and sociology. A striking account of a colony for the mentally ill that forces a reconsideration of madness in society. What happens when the mentally ill are not isolated from society but are instead welcomed into it and invited to take a place in the fabric of the community? Are fear and rejection replaced by the understanding and sympathy often engendered by familiarity? Or are the barriers between the sane and the mad only strengthened? We have experienced a taste of this scenario in the U.S. in the last decade with the new emphasis on de-institutionalization, but Denise Jodelet takes us to an extraordinary community in France where the mentally ill have assumed a visible and prominent role for more than seventy years. The small French town of Ainay-le-Chteau and its environs are the site of a "family colony" for men, established in 1900. Here the patients ("lodgers") live with ordinary families ("foster parents"), hold jobs, and are free to move about the countryside. Jodelet's chronicle of daily life in the colony is made rich and vivid by extensive ethnographic material as she unravels a complex set of relationships, ultimately finding that while some of the barriers between the "other" and the larger society have been overcome, new ones have arisen in their place. This unique social experiment provides invaluable social and cultural insights, illuminating many fundamental issues in psychology, psychiatry, and sociology.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Madness and Social Representations
    By Denise Jodelet

    The patients live with ordinary families, hold jobs and are free to move about. Jodelet's chronicle of daily life in the colony includes extensive ethographic material as she unravels a complex set of relationships.

  • The Psychology of the Social
    By Uwe Flick

    For example , in Jodelet's ( [ 1989a ] 1991 ) study Madness and social representations her concern was to develop an account of a specific set of representations of a particular cultural phenomenon . Jodelet developed a model of ...

  • The Social Constructions and Experiences of Madness
    By Jean-Francois Pelletier, Monika dos Santos

    This book describes how the societal understandings of madness are central to the problem of mental illness, and how this has far reaching effects on those who are said to have a mental disorder, how they perceive themselves, and treatment.

  • Madness and Social Representations: Living with the Mad in One French Community
    By Denise Jodelet

    Madness and Social Representations: Living with the Mad in One French Community

  • Social Representations in the 'Social Arena'
    By Annamaria Silvana de Rosa

    view of madness where society instead had a role, with terms like 'stigma', 'abandoned', 'maladjusted'. ... was the progressive decriminalization of the social representation of the 'mad' in the transition from childhood to adolescence, ...

  • The Cambridge Handbook of Social Representations
    By Gordon Sammut, Jaan Valsiner, George Gaskell

    De Rosa (1987, 1994) developed an extensive research programme on the social representations of madness by children and teenagers. She asked them to draw a mad person and to draw like a mad person. Three main categories concentrated the ...

  • Madness, Power and the Media: Class, Gender and Race in Popular Representations of Mental Distress
    By S. Harper

    Questioning the psychiatric construction of mental distress as 'illness', and challenging existing studies of media stigmatization, Stephen Harper argues that today's media images of mental distress are often sympathetic, yet tend to ...

  • Mediating Madness: Mental Distress and Cultural Representation
    By S. Cross

    Drawing on social and cultural histories of madness, history of art, and popular journalism, the book offers a unique interdisciplinary understanding of historical and contemporary media representations of madness.

  • Empirical Approaches to Social Representations
    By David V. Canter, Glynis Marie Breakwell, Glynis N. Breakwell

    For years, social psychologists and anthropologists have argued about the best way to study social representations. This book shows how different empirical approaches to the study of social representations are...

  • Disease and Representation: Images of Illness from Madness to Aids
    By Sander L. Gilman

    Sander L. Gilman, whose pioneering work on the history of stereotypes has become a model for scholars in many fields, here examines the images that society creates of disease and its victims.