In 1981, Toronto activist Mel Starkman wrote:: An important new movement is sweeping through the western world.... The mad, the oppressed, the ex-inmates of societys asylums are coming together and speaking for themselves. Mad Matters is the first Canadian book to bring together the writings of this vital movement, which has grown explosively in the years since. With contributions from scholars in numerous disciplines, as well as activists and psychiatric survivors, it presents diverse critical voices that convey the lived experiences of the psychiatrized and challenges dominant understandings of mental illness. The connections between mad activism and other liberation struggles are stressed throughout, making the book a major contribution to the literature on human rights and anti-oppression.
Preface Acknowledgements Introducing Mad Studies Part I:: Mad Peoples History, Evolving Culture, and Language Chapter 1:: The Movement, Mel Starkman Chapter 2:: Women in 19th Century Asylums:: Three Exemplary Women; A New Brunswick Hero, Nérée St-Amand and Eugène LeBlanc Chapter 3:: Democracy Is a Very Radical Idea, Lanny Beckman and Megan J. Davies Chapter 4:: What Makes Us a Community? Reflections on Building Solidarity in Anti-Sanist Praxis, Shaindl Diamond Chapter 5:: A Rose by Any Other Name:: Naming and the Battle against Psychiatry, Bonnie Burstow Part II:: Mad Engagements Chapter 6:: Breaking open the bone:: Storying, Sanism, and Mad Grief, Jennifer M. Poole and Jennifer Ward Chapter 7:: Mad as Hell:: The Objectifying Experience of Symbolic Violence, Ji-Eun Lee Chapter 8:: A Denial of Being:: Psychiatrization as Epistemic Violence, Maria Liegghio Chapter 9:: Mad Success:: What Could Go Wrong When Psychiatry Employs Us as Peers? Erick Fabris Part III:: Critiques of Psychiatry:: Practice and Pedagogy Chapter 10:: The Tragic Farce of Community Mental Health Care, Irit Shamrat Chapter 11:: Electroshock:: Torture as Treatment, Don Weitz Chapter 12:: Is Mad Studies Emerging as a New Field of Inquiry? David Reville Chapter 13:: Making Madness Matter in Academic Practice, Kathryn Church Part IV:: Law, Public Policy, and Media Madness Chapter 14:: Mad Patients as Legal Intervenors in Court, Lucy Costa Chapter 15:: Removing Civil Rights:: How Dare We? Gordone Warme Chapter 16:: They should not be allowed to do this to the homeless and mentally ill:: Minimum Separation Distance Bylaws Reconsidered, Lilith Chava Finkler Chapter 17:: The Making and Marketing of Mental Health Literacy in Canada, Kimberley White and M.C. Pike Chapter 18:: Pitching Mad:: News Media and the sychiatric Survivor Perspective, Rob Wipond Part V:: Social Justice, Madness, and Identity Politics Chapter 19:: Mad Nation? Thinking through Race, Class, and Mad Identity Politics, Rachel Gorman Chapter 20:: Whither Indigenizing the Mad Movement? Theorizing the Social Relations of Race and Madness through Conviviality, Louise Tam Chapter 21:: Spaces in Place:: Negotiating Queer In/visibility within Psychiatric and Mental Health Service Settings, Andrea Daley Chapter 22:: Rerouting the Weeds:: The Move from Criminalizing to Pathologizing Troubled Youth in The Review of the Roots of Youth Violence, Jijian Voronka Chapter 23:: Recovery:: Progressive Paradigm or Neoliberal Smokescreen? Marina Morrow Glossary of Terms References Case Law and Statutes About the Editors and Contributors
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