Cultural crossings of care: An appeal to the medical humanities

被引:42
|
作者
Kristeva, Julia [1 ]
Moro, Marie Rose [2 ]
Odemark, John [3 ]
Engebretsen, Eivind [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Paris VII Denis Diderot, Ctr Etud & Rech Interdisciplinaires Lettres Arts, Paris, France
[2] Univ Paris 05, Hop Cochin, Maison Adolescents, Paris, France
[3] Univ Oslo, Fac Humanities, Dept Cultural Studies & Oriental Languages, Oslo, Norway
[4] Univ Oslo, Fac Med, Inst Hlth & Soc, Oslo, Norway
关键词
cura; julia kristeva; culture; cultural encounters; medical humanities; care; psychoanalysis; evidence;
D O I
10.1136/medhum-2017-011263
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Modern medicine is confronted with cultural crossings in various forms. In facing these challenges, it is not enough to simply increase our insight into the cultural dimensions of health and well-being. We must, more radically, question the conventional distinction between the objectivity of science' and the subjectivity of culture'. This obligation creates an urgent call for the medical humanities but also for a fundamental rethinking of their grounding assumptions. Julia Kristeva (JK) has problematised the biomedical concept of health through her reading of the anthropogony of Cura (Care), who according to the Roman myth created man out of a piece of clay. JK uses this fable as an allegory for the cultural distinction between health construed as a definitive state', which belongs to biological life (bios), and healing as a durative process with twists and turns in time' that characterises human living (zoe). A consequence of this demarcation is that biomedicine is in constant need of repairing' and bridging the gap between bios and zoe, nature and culture. Even in radical versions, the medical humanities are mostly reduced to such an instrument of repairment, seeing them as what we refer to as a soft, subjective' and cultural supplement to a stable body of objective', biomedical and scientific knowledge. In this article, we present a prolegomenon to a more radical programme for the medical humanities, which calls the conventional distinctions between the humanities and the natural sciences into question, acknowledges the pathological and healing powers of culture, and sees the body as a complex biocultural fact. A key element in such a project is the rethinking of the concept of evidence' in healthcare.
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页码:55 / 58
页数:4
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