Is it Still Ok to be Ok? Mental Health Labels as a Campus Technology.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Culture Medicine and Psychiatry Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-03-24 DOI:10.1007/s11013-023-09819-3
Neil Armstrong, Laura Beswick, Marta Ortega Vega
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article uses ethnography and coproduced ethnography to investigate mental health labels amongst university students in the UK. We find that although labels can still be a source of stigma, they are also both necessary and useful. Students use labels as 'campus technologies' to achieve various ends. This includes interaction with academics and administrators, but labels can do more than make student distress bureaucratically legible. Mental health labels extend across the whole student social world, as a pliable means of negotiating social interaction, as a tool of self-discovery, and through the 'soft-boy' online archetype, they can be a means of promoting sexual capital and of finessing romantic encounters. Labels emerge as flexible, fluid and contextual. We thus follow Eli Clare in attending to the varying degrees of sincerity, authenticity and pragmatism in dealing with labels. Our findings give pause to two sets of enquiry that are sometimes seen as opposed. Quantitative mental health research relies on what appear to be questionable assumptions about labels embedded in questionnaires. But concerns about the dialogical power of labels to medicalise students also appears undermined.

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没事还可以吗?心理健康标签作为一项校园技术
本文使用民族志和共同制作的民族志来调查心理健康标签在英国的大学生。我们发现,尽管标签仍然可能是耻辱的来源,但它们也是必要和有用的。学生们利用标签作为“校园科技”来达到各种目的。这包括与学者和管理人员的互动,但标签的作用不仅仅是让学生的痛苦在官僚层面上清晰可辨。心理健康标签扩展到整个学生社交圈,作为协商社交互动的柔韧性手段,作为自我发现的工具,通过“软男孩”的在线原型,它们可以成为促进性资本和浪漫邂逅的一种手段。标签是灵活的、流动的和上下文相关的。因此,我们跟随伊莱·克莱尔在处理标签时注意不同程度的诚意,真实性和实用主义。我们的发现暂停了两组调查,有时被视为相反的。定量的心理健康研究依赖于对问卷中嵌入的标签似乎有问题的假设。但对标签对学生进行医学化的对话力量的担忧似乎也受到了削弱。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.90%
发文量
49
期刊介绍: Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry is an international and interdisciplinary forum for the publication of work in three interrelated fields: medical and psychiatric anthropology, cross-cultural psychiatry, and related cross-societal and clinical epidemiological studies. The journal publishes original research, and theoretical papers based on original research, on all subjects in each of these fields. Interdisciplinary work which bridges anthropological and medical perspectives and methods which are clinically relevant are particularly welcome, as is research on the cultural context of normative and deviant behavior, including the anthropological, epidemiological and clinical aspects of the subject. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry also fosters systematic and wide-ranging examinations of the significance of culture in health care, including comparisons of how the concept of culture is operationalized in anthropological and medical disciplines. With the increasing emphasis on the cultural diversity of society, which finds its reflection in many facets of our day to day life, including health care, Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry is required reading in anthropology, psychiatry and general health care libraries.
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