Townsend J M
Cult Med Psychiatry. 1979 Sep;3(3):205-29. doi: 10.1007/BF00114611.
This paper draws on empirical and theoretical studies to argue that popular and professional conceptions of mental illness share specific traits with ethnic stereotypes: (1) they are exaggerated and serve to erect a qualitative boundary where none objectively exists: (2) they are maintained through selective perception, rationalization, and sanctions; (3) they help to erect the "thresholds,' i.e., the criteria, for crossing or recrossing the boundary; (4) they serve to define relations, including those of power, between groups; (5) because they perform these important cognitive and conative functions, they persist despite a flow of personnel across them and despite repeated demonstrations of their inaccuracy. They cannot be expected to change until the actual relations between groups change.
本文借鉴实证研究和理论研究,认为大众和专业领域对精神疾病的认知与种族刻板印象具有特定的共同特征:(1)它们被夸大,旨在在不存在客观界限的地方树立质的界限;(2)它们通过选择性认知、合理化和制裁得以维持;(3)它们有助于确立跨越或重新跨越界限的“门槛”,即标准;(4)它们用于界定群体之间的关系,包括权力关系;(5)由于它们履行这些重要的认知和意动功能,尽管人员在这些界限间流动,尽管它们的不准确之处被反复证明,它们依然存在。在群体间的实际关系发生改变之前,不能指望它们会发生变化。