Linguistique de l’écrit

Revue internationale en libre accès

Livre | Chapitre

188885

Bodily metaphors and welfare regimes

Hartley Dean

pp. 83-102

Résumé

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.

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

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

Citation complète:

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