Stigmatization of Mental Self-Regulation under Ideological Governance: Transcendental Meditation and the Politics of Interior Life in Socialist Romania
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.56508/mhgcj.v9i1.356Keywords:
Mental Health, Health Policy, Social Questions, Health, Discrimination, Governance, Education, CommunicationAbstract
Introduction: Mental self-regulation practices are not socially neutral; their legitimacy is shaped by political, normative, and institutional frameworks that define acceptable forms of interior life. Under ideological governance, practices oriented toward inner calm and attentional regulation may become objects of suspicion rather than care.
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine how mental self-regulation becomes stigmatized and pathologized under ideological governance, using the late socialist Romanian reception of Transcendental Meditation (TM) as a historically grounded case.
Methodology: The article employs a qualitative historical research design based on archival document analysis and critical interpretive methods. The empirical material consists of state-produced documents accessed through the archives of the National Council for the Study of the Securitate Archives (CNSAS), including informative reports, internal correspondence, and institutional assessments.
Results: Archival evidence shows that TM was framed as a “foreign ideological influence” and progressively reclassified through moralizing and medicalized vocabularies. Practitioners’ reports of calm, improved concentration, and emotional balance were recoded as passivity, instability, and diminished ideological vigilance, while universities emerged as key sites of surveillance and sanction.
The findings indicate that stigma functioned preventively, marking inward-oriented autonomy as administratively unmanageable and therefore risky. Mental health language enabled ideological governance to appear scientifically neutral while regulating interior life.
Conclusion: The study clarifies how mental health vocabularies can be mobilized for social control, contributing to debates on mental health governance and the legitimacy of self-regulation practices in contemporary societies.
The Romanian case demonstrates how calm, introspection, and self-regulation become illegitimate when they escape institutional supervision, highlighting the political conditions under which interior life is governed.
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