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The care of the body
pp. 23-44
Abstract
This chapter examines British community care policy and practice in the post-Second World War period in terms of a transition from the dominant corporeal discourse of 'social efficiency" to that of the "independent body" from the mid-1970s onwards. When 'states of dependency" (Titmuss, 1963) were constituted as social risks, the psychic and social spaces to surround bodies under the Dispensary gaze were elaborated; and human subjects were entitled as citizens to have their care needs met outside the institution. Nevertheless, bodily dependency remained a fiscal problem for the welfare state, managed through disciplinary practices redolent of the old institutional order. With global economic crisis and the resurgence of neo-liberal economic orthodoxy, the "burden" of care grew increasingly onerous and the 'social" was displaced by market and `family". Constituted by the discourse of the independent body, dependency in the new mixed economy of care was ever more tightly managed through a reworking of panoptic norms in neo-Taylorism and the banishment of old, sick and disabled bodies to the hinterland of institutional care.
Publication details
Published in:
Ellis Kathryn, Dean Hartley, Campling Jo (2000) Social policy and the body: transitions in corporeal discourse. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 23-44
Full citation:
Ellis Kathryn (2000) „The care of the body“, In: K. Ellis, H. Dean & J. Campling (eds.), Social policy and the body, Dordrecht, Springer, 23–44.