Cult Med Psychiatry. 2025 Jul 21. doi: 10.1007/s11013-025-09929-0. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

The horizon of critical theories and their target audience (i.e., the subjects exposed to social suffering) have drifted apart. While the former relies on its own set of diagnostic concepts (e.g., alienation), the actors are socialized within the frames of biomedical discourses. This creates a rupture between theory and praxis: the concepts of social suffering fail to orient collective action. To overcome this challenge, a translator category is elaborated, which can link the distinct biomedical and critical discourses, while reconnecting theory and praxis. Burnout is chosen as a translator category because it is located at the border of the psychological discourses (on depression) and the critical sociological discourses (on alienation). First, the birth of the concept is reconstructed in a genealogical fashion. Second, the psychological measurement tools and explanations are overviewed with a special emphasis on the failed attempt of discursive medicalization. Third, the sociological explanations are analyzed from the perspective of their potential of breaking the biomedical and psychological discursive hegemony. In the last section, it is discussed how burnout can link the discourses of alienation (as a cause of burnout) and depression (as a consequence of burnout), while remaining accessible to the biomedically socialized subjects.

PMID:40691665 | DOI:10.1007/s11013-025-09929-0