Klein, Anne (2016). CONSUMED WORKERS - DISABLED BODIES. HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE FORMATION AFTER THE CULTURAL TURN. Asclepio, 68 (2). MADRID: CONSEJO SUPERIOR INVESTIGACIONES CIENTIFICAS-CSIC. ISSN 1988-3102

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract

Some recent OECD-studies tackle new psychosomatic symptoms in the context of work. So we find the paradoxical situation, that although the state of health and well-being in societies grows, statistics show growing rates of burn-out syndroms together with uneasiness, addiction and non-functioning. One in five workers suffer from a mental illness, such as depression or anxiety, and many more are struggling to cope. In a closer reading we can see, that the social-medical model still dominates this actual policy research, although the cultural model has gained growing recognition in the last fifteen years. But we find a double blank spot with relevance for historical knowledge formation: On the one side, studies on work that use the tool set of cultural studies can rarely be found. On the other side, disability studies that work with the cultural model are rarely tackling the working subject. Starting from this analytical point, this contribution wants to stimulate historical knowledge formation on the working subject. The epistemic perspective of this study is coined by the cultural model of disability; the methodology is based on the visual, the spatial and the linguistic turn. In studying historical artefacts like film scenes or juridical definitions, we can come to a closer understanding of how we conceptualise human beings. The thesis is, that during the 20th-century the changing microphysics of power (Foucault) produced new forms of subjectivation: Either, workers tried to assimilate to the machine rhythms or they uttered their needs in embodied dissent. There are multilayered facets in between. I want to develop the argumentation that the body/mind-centering seems to be at the heart of the postfordist transformation. The article concludes by underlining the possibility to read bodies as a source, an approach Bryan S. Turner has theorized in his article Disability and the Sociology of the Body.

Item Type: Journal Article
Creators:
CreatorsEmailORCIDORCID Put Code
Klein, AnneUNSPECIFIEDUNSPECIFIEDUNSPECIFIED
URN: urn:nbn:de:hbz:38-270191
DOI: 10.3989/asclepio.2016.22
Journal or Publication Title: Asclepio
Volume: 68
Number: 2
Date: 2016
Publisher: CONSEJO SUPERIOR INVESTIGACIONES CIENTIFICAS-CSIC
Place of Publication: MADRID
ISSN: 1988-3102
Language: English
Faculty: Unspecified
Divisions: Unspecified
Subjects: no entry
Uncontrolled Keywords:
KeywordsLanguage
BODYMultiple languages
History & Philosophy Of ScienceMultiple languages
Refereed: Yes
URI: http://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/id/eprint/27019

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Altmetric

Export

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item