解放 "医学无法解释 "和限制能量的病症:从女权主义残疾研究的视角质疑和重新认识 psy

Joanne Hunt
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摘要

女性主义和(批判的、女性主义的)残疾研究都对霸权心理学对 "理想 "主体的建构及其对他者的边缘化提出了控诉。然而,女性主义文献在很大程度上既缺乏对由心理学构成和传播的残疾的性别、交叉性质的认识,也缺乏对将残疾作为一个分析类别如何加强批判性女性主义改造心理学的努力的探索。本文试图弥补这一不足,采用女性主义残疾研究的视角,以社会和临床上被异化的限制能量的慢性疾病为研究对象,特别是通过将这些疾病战略性地定位为医学上无法解释的疾病,并通过遵从心理学知识体系来实现康复。在讨论了带有权力色彩的性别化、残疾/残障以及更全面的理想化主体的交叉性建构是如何在与福利改革相关的心理学公司-国家议程的支持下,压迫性地塑造了这一领域的主流表述和实践之后,我考虑了心理学(主要是心理治疗)如何从整合女性主义残障研究的思维中获益。我的结论是,女性主义残障研究可以通过以社会文化和生物政治认知、体现和最大程度包容的方式重新认识残障,从而帮助心理学朝着解放的方向转变。医学上无法解释的 "和限制能量的慢性疾病就是这一论断的例证。
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Toward the emancipation of “medically unexplained” and energy-limiting conditions: Contesting and reimagining psy through the lens of feminist disability studies
Indictment of hegemonic psy construction of the “ideal” subject, and its marginalisation of the Other, is common to both feminism and (critical, feminist) disability studies. However, feminist literature largely lacks both an appreciation of the gendered, intersectional nature of disability as constituted and propagated by psy, and an exploration of how integrating disability as a category of analysis can strengthen critical feminist endeavours to transform psy. This article seeks to address this gap, espousing a feminist disability studies lens and taking as its subject energy-limiting chronic illnesses that are socially and clinically othered, notably via a strategic positioning of these illnesses as medically unexplained and recoverable through compliance with psy knowledge regimes. After discussing how power-laden gendered, dis/abled, and more fully intersectional constructions of the idealised subject, bolstered by psy–corporate–state agendas relating to welfare reform, have oppressively shaped dominant representations and practices in this arena, I consider how psy (chiefly, psychotherapy) might benefit from integrating thinking from within feminist disability studies. I conclude that feminist disability studies can help transform psy in an emancipatory direction through reimagining disability in a socioculturally and biopolitically cognisant, embodied, and maximally inclusive manner. The case of “medically unexplained” and energy-limiting chronic illness exemplifies this assertion.
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