Madness is a complex and contested term. Through time and across cultures it has acquired many formulations:: for some, madness is synonymous with unreason and violence, for others with creativity and subversion, elsewhere it is associated with spirits and spirituality. Among the different formulations, there is one in particular that has taken hold so deeply and systematically that it has become the default view in many communities around the world:: the idea that madness is adisorder of the mind. Contemporary developments in mental health activism pose a radical challenge to psychiatric and societal understandings of madness. Mad Pride and mad-positive activism reject the language of mental illness and disorder, reclaim the term mad, and reverse its negative connotations. Activists seek cultural change in the way madness is viewed, and demand recognition of madness as grounds for identity. But can madness constitute such grounds? Is it possible to reconcile delusions, passivityphenomena, and the discontinuity of self often seen in mental health conditions with the requirements for identity formation presupposed by the theory of recognition? How should society respond? Guided by these questions, this book is the first comprehensive philosophical examination of the claims and demands of Mad activism. Locating itself in the philosophy of psychiatry, Mad studies, and activist literatures, the book develops a rich theoretical framework for understanding, justifying, and responding to Mad activisms demand for recognition.
Part 1: Madness; Mental health activism and the demand for recognition; The problem of distress and disability; Part 2: Recognition; The concept of recognition and the problem of freedom; Identity and the psychological consequences of recognition; Misrecognition: Political reform or reconciliation?; Part 3: Routes to recognition; Mad culture; Mad identity I: Controversial and failed identities; Mad identity II: Unity and continuity of self; Madness and the limits of recognition; Part 4: Approaches to Mad Activism; Responding to the demand for recognition of Mad identity; Conclusion: Pathways to reconciliation;
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