Women, Madness and Medicine
Description
Introduction.
1. History of the relationship between Women and Psychiatry.
includes: Women encounter psychiatry; Psychiatrists and asylums; Nineteenth-century psychiatric theories of female madness.
2. Modern Psychiatric Perspectives on Women.
includes: Psychiatric diagnosis and the interests of women; Problems with the conceptual foundations of the DSM-III-R; Problems wit subjectivity; Narrowness of focus; Personality disorders; Personality disorders and biological psychiatry; Personality disorders and child abuse; The medical profession responds to child abuse statistics.
3. Shifting Trends in Diagnosis.
includes: Depression; Biological studies of depression and diagnosis problems; Research into the biological basis of depression; Is depression an illness?; The sociological challenge to biology; Pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS) - defined?; PMS: the causal research generates puzzles; Questions about the PMS diagnosis and its role in the discipline of women.
4. Epistemological Problems with the Dominant Medical Psychiatric Perspective.
includes: Schizophrenia; Genetic studies of schizophrenia; Schizophrenia and body chemistry; Brain imaging studies of schizophrenia; Eating disorders; The biological research into eating disorders; Non-biological accounts of eating disorders.
5. Women, Psychiatry and Criminality.
includes: Female crimes and appropriate female behaviour; Biological psychiatry and female crime; Pre-menstrual syndrome and female crime; Psychiatric legal defences and the interests of women; Battered woman syndrome and the law of self-defence.
6. Contrasting Feminist Philosophies of Women and Madness: Oppression and Repression.
Examining the work of Phyllis Chesler and Luce Irigaray.
7. Women, Creativity, Reason and Madness.
Examining the work of Virginia Woolf and Janet Frame.
8. Beyond Psychiatry.
Notes.
Index.
'Her book beautifully integrates Phyllis Chester's seminal work, Women and Madness. Must reading for upper-division undergraduates, graduates, and professional practitioners in all fields relating to women's health.' Choice'... In this comprehensive critique she systematically analyses and dismisses the bases of psychiatric intervention into the lives of women... What Russell has accomplished in this excellent book is to draw together a number of different arguments, each of which has been covered by other writers, under this one comprehensive assault on the epistemological base of biological psychiatry. Denise Russell is to be congratulated in presenting this timely reminder that the debate goes on.' History of the Human Sciences
'Women, Madness and Medicine continues (or more accurately, restates) a tradition in the feminist critique of the mental health professions whose roots are in the work of Phyllis Chesler, the original analyst of the parallels between patriarchy and psychotherapy ... useful and interesting commentary and reviews.'
Contemporary Psychology
Women, Madness and Medicine looks at the roots of modern psychiatry, its theoretical approach to women, and what shifting trends in diagnosis tell us about its social underpinning. Arguing at both an epistemological and empirical level, Russell challenges the biological base of conditions such as schizophrenia, depression, pre-menstrual syndrome, anorexia and bulimia and female criminality.
The work of women writers such as Phyllis Chesler, Luce Irigaray, Virginia Woolf and Janet Frame is examined in order to develop an alternative way of looking at problems of mental distress in women.
This new approach attempts to dissolve the sanity/madness distinction using notions of oppression and repression and focusing on relations rather than individuals.
This book will be of interest to undergraduates and graduates in women's studies, psychiatry, psychology, philosophy and sociology.
PUBLISHER:
Polity Press
ISBN-13:
9780745612614
BINDING:
Paperback
BISAC:
Social Science
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 155.00(W) x Dimensions: 228.50(H) x Dimensions: 15.30(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English