Maladie mentale et stigmatisation ou Comment on devient un malade mental pour la vie

Fiche du document

Date

1979

Discipline
Type de document
Périmètre
Langue
Identifiant
Relations

Ce document est lié à :
Santé mentale au Québec ; vol. 4 no. 1 (1979)

Collection

Erudit

Organisation

Consortium Érudit

Licence

Tous droits réservés © Santé mentale au Québec, 1979



Citer ce document

Jacqueline C. Massé et al., « Maladie mentale et stigmatisation ou Comment on devient un malade mental pour la vie », Santé mentale au Québec, ID : 10.7202/030048ar


Métriques


Partage / Export

Résumé Fr En

La perspective sociologique telle que présentée ici en relation avec la santé et/ou la maladie mentale est basée sur une approche interactionniste du phénomène. En effet, la société est composée d'un ensemble de normes et de valeurs, partagées par la majorité des personnes au sein d'une même culture à une époque donnée. Ces normes dont l'apprentissage commence dès la naissance de l'individu, sont issues de la génération précédente et ainsi transmises de génération en génération. Normes et valeurs constituent le tissu social, fondement de notre vie en commun. Il s'agit d'une vision de la société centrée principalement sur les rapports entre les individus et la société, et entre les individus et les institutions, ces rapports étant définis par un ensemble d'interdépendance psychologique et sociale.

In this article mental illness is presented in a sociological perspective, giving prominence to social-interaction factors which, in many cases, are responsable for the permanence of this type of illness. Its thereotical base comes !form the psychology of social-interaction developped by G.H. Mead and his disciples. This perspective defines the social human being as derived from successive interactions, beginning, at birth, with maternal contacts and extending progressively to the entirety of the members of the community of which the individual is a part. This interactional network is comprised of messages, of responses, and of expectations which make up the norms and values which in turn from the basis for the distribution of roles and statuses- From these roles and statuses derive the behaviours acceptable to a given collectivity. Among other theoretical developments, interactionist sociology gave birth to formulations on deviance which became known, in american terminology as "labelling theory". In the case of mental illness many sociologists interested in the phenomenon have studied it, using the framework elaborated by the proponents of this approach to deviance. Thus, rather than considering the deviant as abnormal in himself, deviance is viewed as a process; that is, as the result of a series of interactions confronting the individual who is not, or does not behave like the collectivity as a whole and the milieu in which he lives. When the reaction of the entourage is negative, the so-called deviant is subjected to sanctions such as avoidance, rejection, exclusion, confinement, etc... This process terminates generally in stigmatization which wraps the deviant in a label from which he will probably never free himself. The studies cited demonstrate this interactional process at different stages of mental illness, these being; d) at the point of medical diagnosis, b) during hospitalisation, c) on leaving We psychiatric institution, d) and after the return to society. The conclusion leads to an appreciation of the drama experienced by psychiatric ex-patients, for most of whom the label "mentally ill" constitutes an apparently irreversible stigmatization.

document thumbnail

Par les mêmes auteurs

Sur les mêmes sujets

Sur les mêmes disciplines

Exporter en