Liminality and chronic pain

Authors

  • David Le Breton

Keywords:

Chronic pain, Acute pain, Liminality, Suffering, Identity

Abstract

Chronic pain raises the question of a diagnosis that is always delayed and uncertain, subject to revision (or controversy) between different doctors; it is not only an organic condition, but, above all, a social one, since it resonates strongly throughout the network of each patient’s relationships with others. The individual, prey to chronic pain, suffers, but he/she is also in suffering; as is often said of a letter that has never reached its addressee, it is suspended, waiting, provisionally without destination. Immersed in the said liminal situation, he/she is no longer here or elsewhere, he is neither meat nor fish, he is neither from here nor elsewhere, rather he/she is marked by otherness, divided between references that no longer apply to him/her, in resonance with the patient’s sense of identity.

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Published

2020-11-04 — Updated on 2021-04-21

Versions

How to Cite

Le Breton, D. (2021). Liminality and chronic pain. Cuicuilco Revista De Ciencias Antropológicas, 27(78), 19–30. Retrieved from https://www.revistas.inah.gob.mx/index.php/cuicuilco/article/view/16487 (Original work published November 4, 2020)