Mental Illness Stigma: Society's Gossip Fueled Fear

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Deviant beings, especially those who possess a mental illness, are looked down upon by the rest of society. A society, who by nature, is responsible for the stigma attached to mental illness. A mental disorder is a consequential condition which affects a person’s behavior and thinking. The presence of a mental illness can cause significant suffering in a person’s life, and affect their ability to function(Thio, 2010). Considering stigmas, a society doesn’t necessarily need physical proof that the information they acquired is true. Frequently, all a cultural group requires to believe stigmas are true is, “A social agreement that they are real(Waxler, 1998).” One of the more distressing facts about mental illness is essentially hopeless(Thio, 2010). In today’s society, gossip is one of the most popular methods of information gaining. In 2017, a time where trust in others has diminished, people's willingness to believe anything they hear from one another is interesting. Possibly, this inclination to believe gossip is a desire to be in-the-know and if you are, you couldn’t be placed as part of that deviant group. Instead of relying on physical, factual, replicable information regarding mental illnesses, societies are reliant upon the gossip, which leans negative in nature. The more stigmas a culture can construct …show more content…

Labeling theory is unable to provide an explanation for what causes deviance in the first place, although it occurs when powerful people label the less powerful as being deviant. When someone is labeled as deviant, they acquire a tendency to live up to this assigned self-image by engaging in even more deviancy(Thio, 2010). Considering this, political prisoners who do any amount of time and get out, usually wind up back in the Gulag because they cannot escape the binds of the label, or they cannot survive the stigma of their fictitious mental

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