Patients as Persons not Things: [Nursing] Theory - Practice
"Is there something perverse, if not archly insistent, about complicating things with theory? Do we really need anything like thing theory the way we need narrative theory or cultural theory, queer theory or discourse theory? Why not let things alone? Let them rest somewhere else-in the balmy elsewhere beyond theory. From there, they might offer us dry ground above those swirling accounts of the subject, some place of origin unmediated by the sign, some stable alternative to the instabilities and uncertainties, the ambiguities and anxieties, forever fetishized by theory. Something warm, then, that relieves us from the chill of dogged ideation, something concrete that relieves us from unnecessary abstraction." p.1. | |
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My source:
Brown, B. (2001). Thing Theory. Critical Inquiry, 28(1), 1-22. Retrieved September 18, 2020, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/1344258