Illness Experience and Social Suffering: Synthesizing Medical Phenomenology and Critical Theory
Medical phenomenology describes the illness experience while providing an alternative to the reductionist biomedical discourse. Phenomenologically oriented critical theories focus on the experiences of structural paradoxes manifesting as social suffering. While both approaches elaborate different patterns of suffering, so far, their parallelisms and interactions have not been adequately analyzed. This task is all the more important because illness experience is never only about the disabled body or the distressed mind, it is also inseparable from a distorted intersubjectivity; and vice versa, untreated social suffering also has the potential of turning into illness. After overviewing various experiences characterizing illness and those disrupted intersubjectivities, which can produce a homologous phenomenological pattern, four idealtypical patterns are analyzed. The parallel occurrence of illness and social suffering represents extreme existential disembedding; illness without social suffering represents a chance for countering the bodily disembedding by intersubjective re-embedding; social suffering without illness is a constellation, wherein the chance of medicalizing structural distortions is high; the lack of illness and social suffering represents a carefree, yet unreflective potential. Differentiating between these patterns opens new horizons for medical phenomenology and critical theories as well, both on the theoretical and the practical level.