“There is a crack in everything, That's how the light gets in”. Maintaining hygiene and striving for purity: An interdisciplinary study

Hila Naot , Eyal Asor
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Abstract

Context

The concept of hygiene plays a significant role in human life, dividing spaces into opposing categories (clean vs. dirty, pure vs. taboo, familiar and uncanny, etc.) in the pursuit of a long and meaningful life. Across multiple disciplines, hygiene encompasses both physical-material and also mental-spiritual-abstract dimensions, and is studied through various lenses—medicine, religious and cultural studies, psychiatry and psychoanalysis, philosophy and more.

Objectives

The article aims to describe and critically analyze the pattern that defines hygiene maintenance mechanisms in multiple spheres of human activity. The analysis include physical and cultural hygiene in external aspects of our lives, as well as mental-spiritual hygiene in the internal spheres. The investigation explores how the mechanism of pursuing the hygiene works to preserve the “clean” or the “pure” by preventing the intrusion of the “dirty” and “polluting” and examines the implications of strict hygiene practices on life and vitality.

Method

This is a theoretical study drawing on interdisciplinary approaches, including medical research on the formation of the concept of hygiene, leading to the presentation of the “hygiene hypothesis”, religious and cultural analysis of concepts of purity and pollution, as explored by Mary Douglas, and Freud's psychoanalytic theory with focus on the concept of the uncanny (unheimlich) as a sphere of life that seems to “pollute” our inner world. The implications of Freud's ideas are further examined in the works of Winnicott and others.

Results

The study reveals that the strict enforcement of hygiene mechanisms, while aiming to eliminate the polluting element entirely, can paradoxically threaten the very vitality it seeks to protect. This paradox appears in different ways but follows a common pattern: the excessive pursuit of cleanliness may inadvertently harm the source of life that hygiene is intended to safeguard.

Interpretations

The article interprets the findings within a broader theoretical framework, and poses questions regarding the balance between the aspiration for purity and the preservation of life's essential vitality. Theoretical implications suggest a need for caution in how hygiene is approached in health policy, and also in contexts like psychology or psychoanalysis. Future research should explore how this balance can be maintained across other fields, such as ethics, media policy in consumer-driven society or education.
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"万物皆有裂缝,光线由此进入"。保持卫生,追求纯洁:跨学科研究
背景卫生概念在人类生活中扮演着重要角色,它将空间划分为对立的类别(清洁与肮脏、纯洁与禁忌、熟悉与陌生等),以追求长久而有意义的生活。在多个学科中,卫生既包括物理-物质层面,也包括心理-精神-抽象层面,并通过医学、宗教和文化研究、精神病学和精神分析、哲学等不同视角进行研究。分析内容包括我们生活外部的身体和文化卫生,以及内部的心理和精神卫生。研究探讨了追求卫生的机制如何通过防止 "肮脏 "和 "污染 "的侵入来保持 "干净 "或 "纯洁",并探讨了严格的卫生习惯对生命和活力的影响。方法这是一项理论研究,采用了跨学科方法,包括关于卫生概念形成的医学研究,从而提出了 "卫生假说";玛丽-道格拉斯(Mary Douglas)对 "纯洁 "和 "污染 "概念的宗教和文化分析;以及弗洛伊德的精神分析理论,其重点是作为似乎 "污染 "了我们内心世界的生活领域的 "不可思议"(unheimlich)概念。研究结果这项研究揭示,严格执行卫生机制的目的是完全消除污染因素,但却会自相矛盾地威胁到它所要保护的生命力。这种悖论以不同的方式出现,但遵循一个共同的模式:过度追求清洁可能会在无意中损害卫生旨在保护的生命之源。释义本文在一个更广泛的理论框架内对研究结果进行了解释,并就追求纯洁与保护生命基本活力之间的平衡提出了问题。其理论意义表明,在卫生政策以及心理学或精神分析等领域处理卫生问题时需要谨慎。未来的研究应探讨如何在其他领域保持这种平衡,如伦理、消费驱动社会的媒体政策或教育。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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