The search for meaning: eventfulness in the lives of homeless mentally ill persons in the Skid Row district of Los Angeles.
Cohen, A;
(2001)
The search for meaning: eventfulness in the lives of homeless mentally ill persons in the Skid Row district of Los Angeles.
Culture, medicine and psychiatry, 25 (3).
pp. 277-296.
ISSN 0165-005X
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1011825327636
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In the past two decades, the field of psychiatry has seen the once dominant psychoanalytic theories overtaken by biological explanations and approaches to severe mental illness. With this change in perspective, the significance of fantasies and delusions have been reduced to being merely symptoms of psychopathology rather than reflections of human needs and motivations. Using ethnographic evidence from a long-term research project. this paper explores one method by which mentally ill homeless individuals in the Skid Row district of Los Angeles attempted to wrest meaningful lives for themselves out of an environment that featured disaffiliation, violence, boredom, and extreme poverty.