SANTOS, M. G. O.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/8192885793421944; SANTOS, Maria Gorete Olímpio dos.
Résumé:
This dissertation aims to analyze the constituted discourses about epilepsy and which
were put into circulation by medical and popular knowledge, as well as by the Paraíba
press throughout the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century. Epilepsy is a
neurological disease that is usually identified in childhood and for which a cure is not
always found, but a form of control. It is a disease full of stigmas: the disease that
makes you tremble, that provokes convulsions, that promotes madness. Thus, this “evil”
began to be seen in Brazilian society. This research is theoretically located in the field of
the History of Health and Diseases, as it is an illness analyzed from documentation
under the procedures of History, and which is also full of sensitivities, thus demarcating
it in the domains of Cultural History. Methodologically, we use document analysis as a
way to extract from historical sources the silences, the unsaid and what sometimes goes
unnoticed. For that, I focused on newspaper news published in the pages of A União,
Diário da Borborema and O Norte; about the literature on the subject, texts that were
published by doctors who treated epilepsy as a branch of madness, and about the oral
history interviews carried out with women from Paraiba who live with the disease. It
concludes that this is a story that still needs to be told, because historically it has been
full of stereotyped prejudices and judgments, and that, despite advances in medicine and
ways of dealing with epilepsy patients, much still needs to advance.