Thesis ID: CBB001567168

Whose Story Is It Anyway? Constructing the Stories and Pathology of Madness/Mental Illness in the Contemporary U.S. (2010)

unapi

Rector, Claudia A. (Author)


University of Maryland, College Park
Caughey, John L
Sies, Mary C.
Lindemann, Marilee
Parks, Sheri L
Sies, Mary C.
Wilkerson, Abby L.
Lindemann, Marilee
Parks, Sheri L
Wilkerson, Abby L.


Publication Date: 2010
Edition Details: Advisor: Caughey, John L; Committee Members: Sies, Mary C., Wilkerson, Abby L., Lindemann, Marilee, Parks, Sheri L.
Physical Details: 219 pp.
Language: English

Personal stories are always told in the context of broader cultural narratives. Thus, in the contemporary U.S., stories of personal experience of illness and disability are usually informed by Western notions of health and illness, and a binary classification system of normative/non-normative bodies and behaviors. The emerging field of disability studies represents a socially progressive attempt to interrogate and reconfigure discourses that pathologize and medicalize non-normative bodies, challenging medical discourses with an alternate framework of evidence that emphasizes the personal experiences of individuals who have experienced disability or illness and who conceive of these experiences in different ways. Whose Story Is It Anyway? is an interdisciplinary examination of how the cultural authority of medicine compresses a range of individual experiences into narrow, standardized narratives of the experience of depression, for instance, or other phenomena classified as illness. Specifically, my study makes a three-part argument: first, that biological psychiatry has eclipsed psychoanalysis and that medical definitions of mental illness have become the culturally dominant way of determining what kinds of physical or psychological phenomena are classified as bad, e.g., pathological. Second, these definitions then inform and shape stories of personal experience with such phenomena, enough so that standard narrative formats emerge for describing "individual" experiences of both physical disability and madness/mental illness. The personal stories of madness/mental illness then become, in essence, universalized narratives of illness and recovery that reinforce notions of pathology. Third, this standardization of the personal story often aligns with medical narratives in a way that reflects the storytellers' disempowered position in the medical industry, in that telling the "right" story positions them to receive the benefits of working within the medical system, and telling the "wrong" story becomes an act of political activism. Such de facto coercion has substantial implications for intellectual projects, such as disability studies, that rely heavily on the articulation of personal experience as evidence for the need for change. Finally, this study argues for a reexamination of experience-based, identity-focused activism, and for an invigorated humanities project in science studies.

...More

Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 71/07, Jan 2011. Proquest Document ID: 722957964.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567168/

Similar Citations

Article Smith, Matthew; (2008)
Psychiatry Limited: Hyperactivity and the Evolution of American Psychiatry, 1957--1980 (/isis/citation/CBB000930679/)

Article Allen Frances; (2016)
Entrenched Reductionisms: The Bête Noire of Psychiatry (/isis/citation/CBB701478590/)

Article Rubin, Lawrence C.; (2014)
Introduction: Mental Health and Illness in American Culture (/isis/citation/CBB001202129/)

Book Lakoff, Andrew; (2005)
Pharmaceutical Reason: Knowledge and Value in Global Psychiatry (/isis/citation/CBB000775225/)

Book Martin, Emily; (2007)
Bipolar Expeditions: Mania and Depression in American Culture (/isis/citation/CBB000774183/)

Article Baumeister, Alan A.; Hawkins, Mike F.; Uzelac, Sarah M.; (2003)
The Myth of Reserpine-Induced Depression: Role in the Historical Development of the Monoamine Hypothesis (/isis/citation/CBB000340385/)

Article Chloe Silverman; (2022)
How to read ‘Reading the Mind in the Eyes’ (/isis/citation/CBB861035017/)

Article C. P. Sonett; (1994)
Romancing the Solar System (/isis/citation/CBB931920918/)

Book Nattrass, Nicoli; (2012)
The AIDS Conspiracy: Science Fights Back (/isis/citation/CBB001252724/)

Book Schechter, Kate; (2014)
Illusions of a Future: Psychoanalysis and the Biopolitics of Desire (/isis/citation/CBB001551577/)

Book Robbie Duschinsky; Sarah Foster; (2021)
Mentalizing and Epistemic Trust: The Work of Peter Fonagy and Colleagues at the Anna Freud Centre (/isis/citation/CBB976066181/)

Article Baumeister, Alan A.; Francis, Jennifer L.; (2002)
Historical Development of the Dopamine Hypothesis of Schizophrenia (/isis/citation/CBB000340363/)

Book Andrew J. Hogan; (2022)
Disability Dialogues: Advocacy, Science, and Prestige in Postwar Clinical Professions (/isis/citation/CBB207448799/)

Book Anne Harrington; (2019)
Mind Fixers: Psychiatry's Troubled Search for the Biology of Mental Illness (/isis/citation/CBB265847305/)

Book Julie Passanante Elman; (2014)
Chronic Youth: Disability, Sexuality, and U.S. Media Cultures of Rehabilitation (/isis/citation/CBB936255529/)

Thesis Shuko Tamao; (2020)
Memories of Asylums: A Narrative Examination of Postwar State Hospital Experiences (/isis/citation/CBB741533565/)

Authors & Contributors
Baumeister, Alan A.
Sonett, C. P.
Julie Passanante Elman
Sarah Foster
Hyrkäs, Eve-Riina
Mason, Daniel
Journals
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences
European Journal for the History of Medicine and Health
Social History of Medicine
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Journal of Geophysical Research
Journal of American Culture
Publishers
State University of New York at Buffalo
W. W. Norton & Co.
Princeton University Press
Oxford University Press
New York University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
Concepts
Mental disorders and diseases
Psychiatry
Disabilities; disability; accessibility
Biological psychiatry
Psychoanalysis
Clinical psychology
People
Freud, Sigmund
Fonagy, Peter
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century
20th century, early
19th century
18th century
Places
United States
Argentina
South Africa
Finland
Chicago (Illinois, U.S.)
Great Britain
Institutions
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
University of Arizona
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment