000 01581cam a2200277 4500500
005 20250119105907.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aEhrenberg, Alain
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aChanges in the spirit of care: Potential, disability, and lifestyle
260 _c2021.
500 _a99
520 _aThis article describes changes in the common ideals and collective expectations that psychosocial rehabilitation and recovery symbolize, changes by means of which the status of the psychiatric or neurological patient has shifted to that of a moral partner. Through this shift, the aim is to highlight what can be called individualistic attitudes toward contingency, adversity, or negativity. These attitudes consist of certain ways of acting on what one undergoes. It is therefore a question of understanding how social normativity and therapeutic normativity are intertwined: in other words, how our ideas of the human being in society—the social spirit—and our ideas of therapy, the symptom, and healing—the spirit of care—have been transformed in an interdependent manner.
690 _aindividualism
690 _aautonomy
690 _amental health
690 _arecovery
690 _apsychosocial rehabilitation
690 _aindividualism
690 _aautonomy
690 _amental health
690 _aPsychosocial rehabilitation
690 _arecovery
786 0 _nCliniques | o 21 | 1 | 2021-04-18 | p. 24-39 | 2115-8177
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-cliniques-2021-1-page-24?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c412541
_d412541