Women's Madness: Misogyny Or Mental Illness? |
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Page 227
... biological selves . Can we have it both ways ? - The implication of the women - centred theories is that nothing can be changed since women's biology is seen as a fixed entity , even if it is socially constructed as negative only within ...
... biological selves . Can we have it both ways ? - The implication of the women - centred theories is that nothing can be changed since women's biology is seen as a fixed entity , even if it is socially constructed as negative only within ...
Page 249
... biological risk factor which predisposes [ women ] patients to anorexia nervosa . ( Kaplan and Woodside , 1987 : 648 ) ... biologically labile , and have far - reaching conse- quences in terms of the way in which women are treated . The ...
... biological risk factor which predisposes [ women ] patients to anorexia nervosa . ( Kaplan and Woodside , 1987 : 648 ) ... biologically labile , and have far - reaching conse- quences in terms of the way in which women are treated . The ...
Page 319
... Biological aspects of anorexia and bulimia nervosa ' , Journal of consulting and clinical psychology , 55 , 5 , 645–51 . Kardener , S. , Fuller , M. and Mensh , I. 1973 : ' A survey of physicians ' attitudes and practices regarding ...
... Biological aspects of anorexia and bulimia nervosa ' , Journal of consulting and clinical psychology , 55 , 5 , 645–51 . Kardener , S. , Fuller , M. and Mensh , I. 1973 : ' A survey of physicians ' attitudes and practices regarding ...
Contents
The genealogy of womens madness Deconstructing | 17 |
Chapter 3 | 41 |
Chapter 4 | 63 |
Copyright | |
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analysis anorexia antipsychiatrists antipsychiatry argued argument behaviour belief biological body Chesler claim clinical clinical psychology cognitive cognitive therapy critics critiques culture cure Daly dangerous deconstruction deemed mad depression deviant diagnosis discourse of madness discussion disorders dissenters distress drugs Ehrenreich and English evil example experts explanation fantasy fear female femininity feminism feminist therapy Foucault Freud gender heterosexual hormones hysteria individual intervention label male marriage Mary Daly menstruation mental health mental illness misery misogynistic misogynistic discourse misogyny mother nineteenth century object oppression pain pathological patient patriarchal penis person phallocentric phallus physical political pornography position powerless practices problems professional psychiatric psychiatrists psychoanalytic psychology radical feminists rape reality relationship result rhetoric role schizophrenia Sedgewick seen sexual abuse Showalter social society solutions suttee Sylvia Plath symptoms syndrome Szasz theories theorists therapists torture treatment Ussher Victorian Victorian era whilst witchcraft woman women's madness