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188885

Bodily metaphors and welfare regimes

Hartley Dean

pp. 83-102

Abstract

Discussions of welfare policy and social justice lend themselves to the use of bodily metaphors. There is a compelling "organic analogy" (Turner, 1991: 9) that is often drawn between the human body as an organic system and a society which sustains itself through systematic welfare provision. Social policy has in the past been defined as the manifestation "of society's will to survive as an organic whole" (Titmuss, 1963: 39) or, with a slightly different emphasis, as "that which is centred on institutions that create integration and discourage alienation" (Boulding, 1967: 7). The contemporary concern of European social policy with combating 'social exclusion" (e.g. Commission of the European Communities, 1993) represents in many ways a new Durkheimian preoccupation with functionalist notions of integration and solidarity (Levitas, 1996) which are implicitly predicated on notions of social wholeness and the body social.

Publication details

Published in:

Ellis Kathryn, Dean Hartley, Campling Jo (2000) Social policy and the body: transitions in corporeal discourse. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 83-102

DOI: 10.1057/9780230377530_5

Full citation:

Dean Hartley (2000) „Bodily metaphors and welfare regimes“, In: K. Ellis, H. Dean & J. Campling (eds.), Social policy and the body, Dordrecht, Springer, 83–102.