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Psychiatric oppression in women's lives = creative resistance and collective dissent /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Psychiatric oppression in women's lives/ by Emma Tseris, Scarlett Franks, Eva Bright Hart.
其他題名:
creative resistance and collective dissent /
作者:
Tseris, Emma.
其他作者:
Franks, Scarlett.
出版者:
Cham :Springer International Publishing : : 2024.,
面頁冊數:
xiii, 228 p. :ill. (chiefly color), digital ; : 24 cm.;
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
標題:
Women - Mental health services. -
電子資源:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-65068-0
ISBN:
9783031650680
Psychiatric oppression in women's lives = creative resistance and collective dissent /
Tseris, Emma.
Psychiatric oppression in women's lives
creative resistance and collective dissent /[electronic resource] :by Emma Tseris, Scarlett Franks, Eva Bright Hart. - Cham :Springer International Publishing :2024. - xiii, 228 p. :ill. (chiefly color), digital ;24 cm. - Politics of mental health and illness,2731-5274. - Politics of mental health and illness..
Chapter 1 Benevolence and Expertise? Questioning the role of coercive psychiatry in women's lives -- Chapter 2 Disruption: Using participatory, collective, and creative research processes to challenge psy-coercion in women's lives -- Chapter 3 Violence: Psycho-patriarchal oppression across the lifecourse -- Chapter 4 Resistance: Diverse and non-linear journeys in challenging psy-knowledges -- Chapter 5 Imagination: Collective creative responses to psycho-patriarchal oppression -- Chapter 6 Dialogue: Talking about psy-oppression with family members and mental health workers -- Chapter 7 Dissent: Building alternative worlds beyond psy-oppression.
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of women's experiences within mental health services, demonstrating the need for a radical paradigm shift in how women's distress and experiences are understood.Drawing on extensive fieldwork on coercive mental health treatment, including interviews, participatory action research, arts-based research, and public sociology, the book centres the knowledge, skills, and creativity of psychiatrised women. Informed by intersectional feminism and critical mental health theory, the book explores the interlocking oppressions of psychiatric harm and patriarchal power, alongside women's survivorship and resistances. Areas covered include the pathologisation of women's emotions within mental health services, violence and deprivations in involuntary treatment, the surveillance of mothering, and social exclusions arising from psychiatric diagnoses. The book highlights the ability of collective and creative research processes to move beyond the task of documenting psychiatric harm, towards imagining rich alternatives to biomedical, therapeutic, and carceral practices in mental health. It offers a critique of the notions of 'benevolence' and 'expertise', which are commonly used to justify psychiatric coercion.It will appeal to students and scholars working across the fields of critical mental health, sociology, social work, psychiatry, mental health nursing and gender studies. Emma Tseris is senior lecturer in Social Work and Policy Studies at the University of Sydney, Australia, researching feminist and critical mental health theory. She is the author of Trauma, Women's Mental Health and Social Justice: Pitfalls and Possibilities (2019) and co-author of Using Social Research for Social Justice (2023) Scarlett Franks is a survivor researcher from the University of Sydney, Australia, who also serves on the Survivor College of the National Centre for Action on Child Sexual Abuse, the board of directors of the Grace Tame Foundation, and the Advisory Panel of the NSW Office of the Anti-Slavery Commissioner. Eva Bright Hart is a feminist survivor researcher from the University of Sydney, Australia. She is a senior social worker and public health professional from a rural area. Eva is also known as a mother, teacher, gardener, cook, author, activist and artist. As a survivor of psychiatric and gendered violence Eva uses a protective pseudonym so she can contribute without the fear of further discrimination, disablement and involuntary psychiatric treatment for herself and her family. Eva means "living one".
ISBN: 9783031650680
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-031-65068-0doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
1461616
Women
--Mental health services.
LC Class. No.: RC451.4.W6
Dewey Class. No.: 616.890082
Psychiatric oppression in women's lives = creative resistance and collective dissent /
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This book provides a comprehensive analysis of women's experiences within mental health services, demonstrating the need for a radical paradigm shift in how women's distress and experiences are understood.Drawing on extensive fieldwork on coercive mental health treatment, including interviews, participatory action research, arts-based research, and public sociology, the book centres the knowledge, skills, and creativity of psychiatrised women. Informed by intersectional feminism and critical mental health theory, the book explores the interlocking oppressions of psychiatric harm and patriarchal power, alongside women's survivorship and resistances. Areas covered include the pathologisation of women's emotions within mental health services, violence and deprivations in involuntary treatment, the surveillance of mothering, and social exclusions arising from psychiatric diagnoses. The book highlights the ability of collective and creative research processes to move beyond the task of documenting psychiatric harm, towards imagining rich alternatives to biomedical, therapeutic, and carceral practices in mental health. It offers a critique of the notions of 'benevolence' and 'expertise', which are commonly used to justify psychiatric coercion.It will appeal to students and scholars working across the fields of critical mental health, sociology, social work, psychiatry, mental health nursing and gender studies. Emma Tseris is senior lecturer in Social Work and Policy Studies at the University of Sydney, Australia, researching feminist and critical mental health theory. She is the author of Trauma, Women's Mental Health and Social Justice: Pitfalls and Possibilities (2019) and co-author of Using Social Research for Social Justice (2023) Scarlett Franks is a survivor researcher from the University of Sydney, Australia, who also serves on the Survivor College of the National Centre for Action on Child Sexual Abuse, the board of directors of the Grace Tame Foundation, and the Advisory Panel of the NSW Office of the Anti-Slavery Commissioner. Eva Bright Hart is a feminist survivor researcher from the University of Sydney, Australia. She is a senior social worker and public health professional from a rural area. Eva is also known as a mother, teacher, gardener, cook, author, activist and artist. As a survivor of psychiatric and gendered violence Eva uses a protective pseudonym so she can contribute without the fear of further discrimination, disablement and involuntary psychiatric treatment for herself and her family. Eva means "living one".
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