Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.25673/121767
Title: Liberation medicine : past, present, and future
Author(s): Führer, Amand-GabrielLook up in the Integrated Authority File of the German National Library
Vorhölter, JuliaLook up in the Integrated Authority File of the German National Library
Issue Date: 2025
Type: Article
Language: English
Abstract: In her book Death Without Weeping (1992), Nancy Scheper-Hughes coined the term “liberation medicine,” which aims to place the individual experience of illness in a larger social context and use it as a starting point for critical thinking and resistance. Illness, so the basic premise of liberation medicine, is a form of resistance that can be turned into an effective political strategy. Accordingly, medicine is understood to have the potential for a “critical practice of freedom” that can create spaces for patients and medical staff in which new ways of dealing with human suffering are negotiated. Taking Scheper-Hughes’s reflections as a starting point, this editorial introduction to the special section conceptually develops the notion of liberation medicine, outlines how it relates to similar concepts and debates, and sketches what it might mean in the contemporary era. We argue that radically rethinking health and health care is a powerful way to rethink, and change, society at large. In this sense, we understand liberation medicine, following Wilder (2022), as a “concrete utopia.”
URI: https://opendata.uni-halle.de//handle/1981185920/123718
http://dx.doi.org/10.25673/121767
Open Access: Open access publication
License: (CC BY 4.0) Creative Commons Attribution 4.0(CC BY 4.0) Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Journal Title: Culture, medicine and psychiatry
Publisher: Springer Science + Business Media B.V.
Publisher Place: Dordrecht
Volume: 49
Original Publication: 10.1007/s11013-025-09949-w
Page Start: 971
Page End: 984
Appears in Collections:Open Access Publikationen der MLU

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