J. Lawton, CONTEMPORARY HOSPICE CARE - THE SEQUESTRATION OF THE UNBOUNDED BODY AND DIRTY DYING, Sociology of health & illness, 20(2), 1998, pp. 121-143
This paper is based on a IO-month participant observation study within
an inpatient hospice in Southern England. I highlight the difficultie
s of using homogenous categories such as 'the dying patient' and 'the
dying process' in exploring the marginalisation of patients within the
physical space of contemporary hospices and similar institutions. In
opposition to such categories, my findings indicate the importance of
focusing upon the body of the patient, and the disease processes takin
g place within it and upon its surfaces, in understanding why some pat
ients are now sequestered within hospices whereas others are not. I ar
gue that a significant proportion of patients are admitted to hospices
because of the way in which their disease spread and subsequent deter
ioration affects the boundedness of their bodies and undermines their
identities as persons. I suggest that conceptualising a hospice as a '
no place' - i.e. a space within which the taboo processes of bodily de
formation and decay are sequestered - allows it to be understood as a
central part of contemporary Western culture. Setting the disintegrati
ng body apart from mainstream society, as hospices appear to do, enabl
es certain ideas about 'living', personhood and the hygienic, sanitise
d, bounded body to be symbolically enforced and maintained.