SOC363: 1. Intro Flashcards
Mental Health as a Social Mirror
social mirror: marker reflects meaning of social environs experienced by indivs exposed
“Mental health is everyone’s ultimate dependent variable”
Why mental health?
efficient indicator of emotional status in environments
Emotional status reflects benign vs. destructive influences of social environments on human functioning
Ultimate Dependent Variable
ppl have in mind when they study other issues —
study of child “well-being” in disadvantaged neighborhoods: losses to educational achievement, single-parent families, increased threats to security
The effect of divorce on men and women: the focus on loss of financial resources.
Ultimate Dependent Variable
Studies of immigrant “incorporation” into labor force
Consequences of segregation
Effects of social + work policies: “family-friendly”, parental leaves, flex time
Sociological Perspectives: Some Fundamentals (from Aneshensel)
sociological orientation — how society shapes thoughts, feelings + actions of its members in ways that are considered to be mental illness + with consequences of having, or being thought to have, a mental illness.”
Sociological Perspectives: Some Fundamentals (from Aneshensel)
Suggests social causation
argument that social status + social environment have a causal role in mental health problems
Sociological Perspectives: Some Fundamentals (from Aneshensel)
Could be indirect role, as in:
environ - change in brain functioning - mental illness
environ can be the original cause of mental illness
Sociological Perspectives: Distinctive Role
Basic difference with psychology, biology, and psychiatry:
Sociology de-individuates problem of functioning – away from indiv + locates problem in environ
Sociological Perspectives: Distinctive Role
pose possibility reaction to the environment is natural
tend to favour individualist explanation, the genetic or biological explanation - Simpler
Sociological Perspectives: Distinctive Role
Single cause argument: suggests magic bullet drug
Distracts from role of more difficult problems to articulate + solve
Sociological Perspectives: Distinctive Role
overwhelms discourse: obsessive focus on biology + neuroscience
avoid social inequality problems that we feel we don’t have control over
Sociological Perspectives:
Typical Components of Mental Health Problems
Disturbances in emotions + affect
sense of suffering, of hurt, of pain
Changes in thinking + behavior that cannot be understood – by the individual or by others
Emotions without a cause – elation, sadness, anxiety, fears
Sociological Perspectives:
Typical Components of Mental Health Problems
problem of defining core
recently been bereaved or suffered some other tragedy would be classified insane, along with countless others who live lives of quiet despair brought about by poverty, injustice, racism, war, famine and disease
Sociological Perspectives:
Typical Components of Mental Health Problems
Cruelty and brutality are not the exclusive property of mad people, but are regularly practiced in many of our most cherished institutions; auditory and visual hallucinations are not considered untoward in the feverish, the religious fanatic, psychic or the drug user;
Sociological Perspectives:
Typical Components of Mental Health Problems
no therapeutic intervention has been designed to “cure” the grandiose self-importance of statesmen, prelates, and pop stars, + our political leaders’ mendacity and ability to simultaneously maintain wholly inconsistent and contradictory positions is not taken as an indication that they are deranged
Suffering is suffering – this IS the problem we want to focus on o Context matters
Sociological Perspectives: Social Construction
Mental illness “created” as a method of social control.
Denies suffering, patterns and causation of suffering - anti-progressive
Hides consequences of social inequality
Sociological Perspectives: The Illness Controversy
problems of the Medical Model
No demonstrated organic causation: result can be confused with cause
attribute mental illness to genetics or chemical imbalance and also stressful circumstances
these circumstances - stresses are patterned by social disadvantage
Sociological Perspectives: The Illness Controversy
Some problems seems to act that way; others don’t.
Categories: eating disorders, dissociative disorders, schizophrenia, antisocial personality..
Dimensional: depression, anxiety, PTSD..
Beginnings of the Area
Origins in stratification research classic studies of social class results show that highest rate occurs in lower classes
Beginnings of the Area
Chicago School focus on emerging issues of urban life
Social patterns reflect ecological reality that supersedes individual + in tension with biological/genetic reductionism
Beginnings of the Area
rates drop away from centre of Chicago poorest people were downtown argument for socail causation but causation or social selection? social causation: low social class are causal in mental health problems