The Social Representations of Psychiatry and Mental Illness Examined Through the Analysis of Music as a Cultural Product
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47513/mmd.v9i4.535Özet
Culture reflects and shapes the understanding of health and disease. We propose that the analysis of cultural products related to music, particularly song lyrics, can inform us about the social representations of psychiatry and mental illness. In order to support our proposal and engage in future research, we examine research regarding social representations of science, medicine, illness and psychiatry in music.
Referanslar
Erfuth A, Hoff P. Mad scenes in early 19th-century opera. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2000: 102:310-3.
Herrera M., Marset P., Llor C., Cánovas J. Psiquiatría y cine en España durante la dictadura franquista (1939-1975). Norte de salud mental. 2011: 9(41):87-93.
Pirkis J, Blood RW, Francis C, McCallum K. On-screen portrayals of mental illness: extent, nature, and impacts. J Health Commun. 2006: 11(5):523-41.
Jones AH. Literature and medicine: narratives of mental illness. The Lancet. 1997: 350 (9074):359-361.
Fernández-Zoïla A. Madness in Zolaʼs writing. II. Interactions of insanity in La Joie de Vivre. 1. Situations and psychopathologic types. Ann Med Psychol (Paris). 1985: 143(1): 1-13.
Recours R, Aussaguel F, Trujillo N. Metal music and mental health in France. Cult Med Psychiatry. 2009: 33:473-88.
Baxendale S. The representation of epilepsy in popular music. Epilepsy & Behavior. 2008: 12:165-169.
Herd D. Changes in the prevalence of alcohol use in rap song lyrics, 1979–2009. Subst Use Misuse. 2014: 49(3):333–42.
Oksanen A. Addiction and rehabilitation in autobiographical books by rock artists, 1974-2010. Drug and Alcohol Review. 2013: 32: 53-59.
Primack BA, Dalton MA, Carrol MV, Agarwal AA, Fine MJ. Content Analysis of tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs in popular music. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2008: 162(2): 169-175.
Sanders T, Sanders M, White W. “When I get low, I get high”: the portrayal of addiction and recovery in African American music. Counselor. 2006: 7:30–5.
Markert J. Sing a song of drug use-abuse: four decades of drug lyrics in popular music, from the sixties through the nineties. Sociol Inq. 2001: 71:194–220.
Floru L. Madness and its musical description during music history. Confin Psychiatr .1974: 17:69-93.
Barros JP, Jorge MS. Vozes da Loucura Cantada: Sentidos sobre a Loucura e o Louco em Cancoes Brasileiras. Ciênc saúde colet. 2011: 16:4845-54.
Greenberg DM, Baron-Cohen S, Stillwell DJ, Kosinski M, Rentfrow PJ. Musical preferences are linked to cognitive styles. PLoS ONE. 2015: 10(7):e0131151.
Mula M, Trimble MR. Music and madness: neuropsychiatric aspects of music. Clinical Medicine. 2009: 9(1): 83-86.
Nizamie SH, Tikka SK. Psychiatry and Music. Indian Journal of Psychiatry. 2014: 56 (2):128-140.
Reilly TJ. Hip-hop and psychiatry: a fair rap? Br J Psychiatry. 2013: 203:408.
McDonald J. Psychiatry rocks. Br J Psychiatry. 2012: 200:453.
Woods G. Mother’s Little Helper - psychiatry in music. Br J Psychiatry. 2016: 208:555.