The Imperative of Health: Public Health and the Regulated BodySAGE, 1995年6月15日 - 192 頁 In this reappraisal of public health and health promotion in contemporary societies, Deborah Lupton explores public health and health promotion using contemporary sociocultural and political theory, particularly that building on Foucault′s writings on subjectivity, embodiment and power relations. The author examines the implications of the new social theories for the study of health promotion and health communication to analyze the symbolic nature of public health practices, and explores their underlying meanings and assumptions. |
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... example, Davies, 1991). It is argued that the state should let its citizens conduct their lives as they choose fit, without intervening. In Britain, rightwing individuals supportive of the laissezfaire model of government have ...
... example, Davies, 1991). It is argued that the state should let its citizens conduct their lives as they choose fit, without intervening. In Britain, rightwing individuals supportive of the laissezfaire model of government have ...
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... example, Foucault, 1975, 1979; Wright and Treacher, 1982; Turner, 1984, 1992). While this area of inquiry has produced fertile debate, particularly in the wake of Foucault's writings on medicine and the body, one dimension of medicine ...
... example, Foucault, 1975, 1979; Wright and Treacher, 1982; Turner, 1984, 1992). While this area of inquiry has produced fertile debate, particularly in the wake of Foucault's writings on medicine and the body, one dimension of medicine ...
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... example, all bodies die and decay. I favour a dialectical approach to body, which recognizes the location of bodies in nature, but also the ways in which discourses act to shape bodies, and experiences of bodies, in certain ways over ...
... example, all bodies die and decay. I favour a dialectical approach to body, which recognizes the location of bodies in nature, but also the ways in which discourses act to shape bodies, and experiences of bodies, in certain ways over ...
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... for regulation, panopticism; for restraint, asceticism; and for representation, commodification. The discourses and practices of public health and health promotion attempt to serve all these functions. For example, arguments of.
... for regulation, panopticism; for restraint, asceticism; and for representation, commodification. The discourses and practices of public health and health promotion attempt to serve all these functions. For example, arguments of.
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... example). The latter two ways outlined by Turner in which the state deals with bodies are also highly relevant to the activities of health promotion, in its concern with selfsurveillance, discipline and control; for example the ...
... example). The latter two ways outlined by Turner in which the state deals with bodies are also highly relevant to the activities of health promotion, in its concern with selfsurveillance, discipline and control; for example the ...
內容
Contemporary Health Promotion | |
Risk Discourse and Diagnostic Testing | |
the Mass Media and Advertising | |
Bodies Pleasures and the Practices of the Self | |
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advertising AIDS alcohol anxiety argued attempt audience behaviour believed body breast cancer cancer cervical cancer cigarette commodities concept concern constructed consumer contemporary context cultural death desire developed discourses and practices disease dominant emerging emotions emphasis epidemic epidemiology everyday example exercise Foucault gene genetic screening governmentality grotesque body groups health and health health education health promotion agencies health promotional discourses health promotional literature health risk health status healthism human hygiene identified illhealth imperatives individual’s individuals knowledge lifestyle living London mass media means media campaigns medicine moral Nelkin nineteenth century notion one’s Pap smears people’s perspective pleasure political population potential prevention problem public health movement rationality regulation relationship resistance responsibility risk discourse Routledge safer sex self sexual smoking social hygiene movement social marketing society sociocultural Sociology sporting strategies Sydney theory twentieth century vaccination venereal disease women