MAIN FEATURES OF NARROW SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIES EXPLAINING MENTAL DISORDERS Cover Image

ГЛАВНА ОБЕЛЕЖЈА УЖИХ СОЦИОЛОШКИХ ТЕОРИЈА ОБЈАШЊЕЊА ДУШЕВНОГ ПОРЕМЕЋАЈА
MAIN FEATURES OF NARROW SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIES EXPLAINING MENTAL DISORDERS

Author(s): Petar Opalić
Subject(s): Behaviorism, Evaluation research, Social Theory, Health and medicine and law
Published by: Српско социолошко друштво
Keywords: anomie; social role; labeling; career of the mentally ill; etnomethodology; anti-psychiatry; social origin of mental disorders;

Summary/Abstract: In the introduction, the author states that sociological theories explaining mental disorders in the narrow sense have originated as an opposition to medical, i.e. biological model of interpreting mental disorders. With regard to this, the following sociological theories explaining mental disorders are presented in more detail: theory of anomie by Durkheim and Merton (with Merton’s typology of deviant behavior), social roles theory by Parsons, labeling theory by Scheff and other authors, theoretical career model of the mentally ill, the concept of psychic disorder of etnomethodology and finally, the anti-psychiatric interpretation of mental disorders. It is concluded that, although historically older, sociological theories of the onset of mental disorders are filling the epistemological void that occurred in understanding the role of society on the whole and a series of social factors particularly on the different aspects of understanding mental disorders.

  • Issue Year: 40/2006
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 189-205
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: Serbian