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Jonathan Metzl

    Cet auteur explore les liens complexes entre la santé mentale et les forces sociétales, en s'appuyant sur son expertise de psychiatre. Son travail se penche en profondeur sur l'impact des blessures et des décès liés aux armes à feu sur la société américaine. Il cherche à comprendre et à aborder ces problèmes pressants par le biais de ses recherches et de ses activités universitaires. Son approche est informée à la fois par la pratique clinique et par une perspective de santé publique non partisane.

    What We've Become
    Prozac on the Couch
    Dying of Whiteness
    Protest Psychosis
    • Protest Psychosis

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,2(56)Évaluer

      A powerful account of how cultural anxieties about race shaped American notions of mental illness The civil rights era is largely remembered as a time of sit-ins, boycotts, and riots. But a very different civil rights history evolved at the Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane in Ionia, Michigan. In The Protest Psychosis, psychiatrist and cultural critic Jonathan Metzl tells the shocking story of how schizophrenia became the diagnostic term overwhelmingly applied to African American protesters at Ionia—for political reasons as well as clinical ones. Expertly sifting through a vast array of cultural documents, Metzl shows how associations between schizophrenia and blackness emerged during the tumultuous decades of the 1960s and 1970s—and he provides a cautionary tale of how anxieties about race continue to impact doctor-patient interactions in our seemingly postracial America. This book was published with two different covers. Customers will be shipped the book with one of the two covers.

      Protest Psychosis
    • Dying of Whiteness

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      4,1(5568)Évaluer

      The mortal consequences of right-wing backlash politics for the white voters they promise to help

      Dying of Whiteness
    • Prozac on the Couch

      • 275pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,2(40)Évaluer

      Argues that the rise in psychiatric drug treatments was not a radical turn away from psychoanalysis, but instead carries on Freudian assumptions, especially in relation to gender.

      Prozac on the Couch
    • An urgent wake-up call about the future of gun safety reform in America

      What We've Become