Moreira, T. (2004) 'Self, agency and the surgical collective : detachment.', Sociology of health and illness., 26 (1). pp. 32-49.
Abstract
In this article, I describe the socio-technical organisation of surgical rehabilitation. After having gone through surgical intervention, patients are implicated within various types of medical work aimed at adjusting their bodies to post-operative social and material environments. My argument is that the process of re-establishment of a 'self' is mediated through a re-disposition of agency in the socio-technical ensemble upon which the patient depends immediately after surgery. Drawing on one year of ethnographic fieldwork in a neurosurgical clinic, and theoretical resources from science and technology studies, this paper is an attempt to describe how, within surgical post-operative practices, the relational dynamics of social and material components endorsed within those practices may re-institute patients' sense of themselves, and re-organise their relationship with the world and other people. In surgery, the outcome of this dynamic process is the reorganisation of forms of agency for the patient. I will refer to this reorganisation as 'detachment'. It is my contention that this research may contribute to the literature on the experience of chronic illness by specifying the socio-technical conditions for the local achievement of self and agency.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Keywords: | Self, Agency, Surgery, Surgical, Recovery, Actor network theory. |
| Full text: | Full text not available from this repository. |
| Publisher Web site: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9566.2004.00377.x |
| Record Created: | 01 Dec 2008 |
| Last Modified: | 20 Apr 2010 16:56 |
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