Pathology and the Postmodern
Mental Illness as Discourse and Experience
Edited by:
- Dwight Fee - Middlebury College, Vermont
February 2000 | 288 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
In this wide-ranging exploration of the relationship between mental distress and social constructionism, eminent cross-disciplinary scholars rework modernist assumptions about how the phenomenology of mental dysfunction works. The authors address how specific cultural, economic and historical forces converge in contemporary psychiatry and psychology and how new syndromes, sugjectivities and identities are being constructed and deconstructed in technological, culturally mediated and hyper-reflexive contexts, and what new critiques and understandings of 'pathology' seem viable, given these still emerging scenarios.
PART ONE: INTRODUCTION
Dwight Fee
The Broken Dialogue
PART TWO: PSYCHIATRIC DISCOURSE AND MENTAL LIFE IN POSTMODERN SPACES
Simon Gottschalk
Escape from Insanity
Jackie Orr
Performing Methods
Dwight Fee
The Project of Pathology
PART THREE: PATHOLOGY AND SELFHOOD: NEW AND CONTESTED SUBJECTIVITIES
Kenneth J Gergen
The Self
Mark Freeman
Modernists at Heart? Postmodern Artist Breakdowns and the Question of Identity
Janet Wirth-Cauchon
A Dangerous Symbolic Mobility
John P Hewitt, Michael R Fraser and Leslie Beth Berger
Is it Me or Is it Prozac? Antidepressants and the Construction of Self
PART FOUR: TOWARD NEW APPROACHES: EPISTEMOLOGY, RESEARCH, POLITICS
Vivian Burr and Trevor Butt
Psychological Distress and Postmodern Thought
Jane Ussher
Women's Madness
S R Sabat and Rom Harr[ac]e
Grammar and the Brain
Fred Newman
Does a Story Need a Theory? Understanding the Methodology of Narrative Therapy