6533b861fe1ef96bd12c4504

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Transforming subjectivities in psychiatric care

Toril Borch Terkelsen

subject

medicine.medical_specialtySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)VDP::Medical disciplines: 700::Clinical medical disciplines: 750::Psychiatry child psychiatry: 757Educational technologyIdentity (social science)Norwegianlanguage.human_languagePower-knowledgelanguageInstitutionmedicineNormalization (sociology):Medical disciplines: 700::Health sciences: 800::Nursing science: 808 [VDP]SociologyPsychiatryApplied Psychologymedia_commonGovernmentality

description

Accepted version of an article in the journal: Subjectivities. The definitive publisher-authenticated version: Transforming subjectivities in psychiatric care, Subjectivity, Vol. 27, 195–216 , 2009, Palgrave Macmillan is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/sub.2009.6 This paper is based upon ethnographic fieldwork in a Norwegian psychiatric unit practicing a psycho-educational treatment of young adults diagnosed with schizophrenia. An aim of the programme is that patients learn to detect and monitor their 'symptoms' in order to obtain 'insight into their own illness', thus transforming themselves into self-governed and self-responsible subjects who are able to cope with life outside institutions. The programme is constituted within a medical framework with a strong emphasis on medicine compliance. I explore the dynamics of power relations inherent in the programme, referring to Foucault's descriptions of discipline and normalization through pedagogy and examinations. His concepts of governmentality and self-technologies have proved useful as a frame for a critical evaluation of such programmes. However, subjectivities cannot be read off directly from educational technology, and my data from everyday, mundane settings in the institution reveal paradoxes and contradictions, which are accounted for in this study. schizophrenia, psycho-education, foucault, power-knowledge, governmentality, subjectivity

https://doi.org/10.1057/sub.2009.6