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Past, present and imaginary: Pathography in all its forms

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posted on 2023-04-18, 18:22 authored by Annemarie JutelAnnemarie Jutel, G Russell
Diagnosis is a profoundly social phenomenon which, while putatively identifying disease entities, also provides insights into how societies understand and explain health, illness and deviance. In this paper, we explore how diagnosis becomes part of popular culture through its use in many non-clinical settings. From historical diagnosis of long-deceased public personalities to media diagnoses of prominent politicians and even diagnostic analysis of fictitious characters, the diagnosis does meaningful social work, explaining diversity and legitimising deviance in the popular imagination. We discuss a range of diagnostic approaches from paleopathography to fictopathography, which all take place outside of the clinic. Through pathography, diagnosis creeps into widespread and everyday domains it has not occupied previously, performing medicalisation through popularisation. We describe how these pathographies capture, not the disorders of historical or fictitious figures, rather, the anxieties of a contemporary society, eager to explain deviance in ways that helps to make sense of the world, past, present and imaginary.

History

Preferred citation

Jutel, A. & Russell, G. (2021). Past, present and imaginary: Pathography in all its forms. Health (United Kingdom), 136345932110607-136345932110607. https://doi.org/10.1177/13634593211060759

Journal title

Health (United Kingdom)

Publication date

2021-01-01

Pagination

136345932110607-136345932110607

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2021-11-25

ISSN

1363-4593

eISSN

1461-7196

Language

en