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Автор: João Biehl
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isbn: 9780520951464
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      VITA

      VITALife in a Zone of Social Abandonment

      João Biehl

      Photographs by Torben Eskerod

      Updated with a New Afterword

      and Photo Essay

      University of California Press

      BerkeleyLos AngelesLondon

      University of California Press, one of the most distinguished university presses in the United States, enriches lives around the world by advancing scholarship in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Its activities are supported by the UC Press Foundation and by philanthropic contributions from individuals and institutions. For more information, visit www.ucpress.edu.

      University of California Press

      Berkeley and Los Angeles, California

      University of California Press, Ltd.

      London, England

      © 2005, 2013 by The Regents of the University of California

      ISBN 978-0-520-27295-8

      eISBN 9780520951464

      The Library of Congress has cataloged an earlier edition of this book as follows:

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Biehl, João Guilherme.

      Vita : life in a zone of social abandonment / João Biehl ; photographs by Torben Eskerod.

      p.cm.

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      ISBN 978-0-520-24278-4 (pbk. : alk. paper)

      1. Vita (Asylum : Porto Alegre, Brazil)2. Institutional care—Brazil—Porto Alegre.3. Marginality, Social—Brazil—Porto Alegre.I. Title.

      HV63.B6B542005

      362’.0425’09815—dc22

      2005041745

      Manufactured in the United States of America

      22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (R 2002) (Permanence of Paper).

      For Adriana and Andre

      Contents

      Introduction: “Dead alive, dead outside, alive inside”

      PART ONE. VITA

      A Zone of Social Abandonment

      Brazil

      Citizenship

      PART TWO. CATARINA AND THE ALPHABET

      Life of the Mind

      Society of Bodies

      Inequality

      Ex-Human

      The House and the Animal

      “Love is the illusion of the abandoned”

      Social Psychosis

      An Illness of Time

      God, Sex, and Agency

      PART THREE. THE MEDICAL ARCHIVE

      Public Psychiatry

      Her Life as a Typical Patient

      Democratization and the Right to Health

      Economic Change and Mental Suffering

      Medical Science

      End of a Life

      Voices

      Care and Exclusion

      Migration and Model Policies

      Women, Poverty, and Social Death

      “I am like this because of life”

      The Sense of Symptoms

      Pharmaceutical Being

      PART FOUR. THE FAMILY

      Ties

      Ataxia

      Her House

      Brothers

      Children, In-Laws, and the Ex-Husband

      Adoptive Parents

      “To want my body as a medication, my body”

      Everyday Violence

      PART FIVE. BIOLOGY AND ETHICS

      Pain

      Human Rights

      Value Systems

      Gene Expression and Social Abandonment

      Family Tree

      A Genetic Population

      A Lost Chance

      PART SIX. THE DICTIONARY

      “Underneath was this, which I do not attempt to name”

       Book I

       Book II

       Book III

       Book IV

       Book V

       Book VI

       Book VII

       Book VIII

       Book IX

       Book X

       Book XI

       Book XII

       Book XIII

       Book XIV

       Book XV

       Book XVI

       Book XVII

       Book XVIII

       Book XIX

      Conclusion: “A way to the words”

      Postscript: “I am part of the origins, not just of language, but of people”

      AFTERWORD

      Return to Vita

      Acknowledgments

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

      Backyard, Vita 2001

      Introduction

      “Dead alive, dead outside, alive inside”

      “In my thinking, I see that people forgot me.”

      Catarina said this to me as she sat pedaling an old exercise bicycle and holding a doll. This woman of kind manners, with a piercing gaze, was in her early thirties; her speech was lightly slurred. I first met Catarina in March 1997, in southern Brazil at a place called Vita. I remember asking myself: where on earth does she think she is going on this bicycle? Vita is the endpoint. Like many others, Catarina had been left there to die.

      Vita, which means “life” in Latin, is an asylum in Porto Alegre, a comparatively well-off city of some two million people. Vita was founded in 1987 by Zé das Drogas, a former street kid and drug dealer. After his conversion to Pentecostalism, Zé had a vision in which the Spirit told him to open an institution where people like him could find God