This reflection piece considers how expertise has been generated within the history of madness, disability, eugenics, psychiatry and anti-psychiatry. As numerous scholars and critics have pointed out, the power of rational argumentation can be persuasive, while its absence can be pathologized. Yet, in the fields of madness studies and critical disability studies we can see many examples of how the dividing line between normal and pathological states have been contested, especially where those categories correspond with notions of expertise, experience, and insight. This short paper reflects on these themes and draws from a selection of research case studies, in the hopes of encouraging other scholars to take up these questions in their own work to destabilize concepts of expertise as fixed categories of ability and skill. Instead, I use these examples to promote a more complex and diverse way of interpreting expressions of dissent as potential forms of expertise.
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Article
Mauricio V Daker;
(2019)
The theory of symptom complexes, mind and madness
(/isis/citation/CBB264539507/)
Article
Polaris Koi;
(2021)
Genetics on the neurodiversity spectrum: Genetic, phenotypic and endophenotypic continua in autism and ADHD
(/isis/citation/CBB820126370/)
Book
Pierre-Olivier Méthot;
(2020)
Vital Norms: Canguilhem's "The Normal and the Pathological" in the Twenty-First Century
(/isis/citation/CBB485036105/)
Article
Santiago Stucchi-Portocarrero;
(2018)
Eugenics, medicine and psychiatry in Peru
(/isis/citation/CBB864800904/)
Book
Andrew Scull;
(2022)
Desperate Remedies: Psychiatry’s Turbulent Quest to Cure Mental Illness
(/isis/citation/CBB599271041/)
Book
Owen Whooley;
(2019)
On the Heels of Ignorance: Psychiatry and the Politics of Not Knowing
(/isis/citation/CBB842410847/)
Book
Appignanesi, Lisa;
(2007)
Mad, Bad and Sad: A History of Women and the Mind Doctors from 1800 to the Present
(/isis/citation/CBB001022250/)
Article
Crozier, Ivan;
(2012)
Making Up Koro: Multiplicity, Psychiatry, Culture, and Penis-Shrinking Anxieties
(/isis/citation/CBB001250104/)
Article
José I Pérez Revuelta;
José M Villagrán Moreno;
(2021)
Moreau de Tours: organicism and subjectivity. Part 2: Moreau as psychopathologist
(/isis/citation/CBB912675190/)
Article
German E Berrios;
Johan Schioldann;
(2018)
From Evolutive Paranoia, by August Wimmer (1902)
(/isis/citation/CBB270265478/)
Article
Jose I Pérez Revuelta;
Jose M Villagrán Moreno;
(2021)
Moreau de Tours: organicism and subjectivity. Part 1: Life and work
(/isis/citation/CBB757360111/)
Thesis
Braitman, Laurel;
(2013)
Animal Madness: A Natural History of Disorder
(/isis/citation/CBB001567524/)
Article
John Carson;
(December 2018)
‘Every Expression is Watched’: Mind, Medical Expertise and Display in the Nineteenth-century English Courtroom
(/isis/citation/CBB111652964/)
Article
James W. E. Lowe;
(2016)
Normal development and experimental embryology: Edmund Beecher Wilson and Amphioxus
(/isis/citation/CBB114945953/)
Book
Mike Jay;
(2016)
This Way Madness Lies
(/isis/citation/CBB241296371/)
Book
Bruce M. Z. Cohen;
(2016)
Psychiatric Hegemony: A Marxist Theory of Mental Illness
(/isis/citation/CBB184810423/)
Book
Allan H. Ropper;
Brian Burrell;
(2019)
How the Brain Lost Its Mind: Sex, Hysteria, and the Riddle of Mental Illness
(/isis/citation/CBB145052886/)
Book
Chiang, Howard Hsueh-Hao;
(2014)
Psychiatry and Chinese History
(/isis/citation/CBB001422492/)
Article
Daniel Mason;
Honor Hsin;
(2018)
‘A more perfect arrangement of plants’: the botanical model in psychiatric nosology, 1676 to the present day
(/isis/citation/CBB222714448/)
Book
Dowbiggin, Ian Robert;
(2011)
The Quest for Mental Health: A Tale of Science, Medicine, Scandal, Sorrow, and Mass Society
(/isis/citation/CBB001251120/)
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