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Being Human Alastair Morgan

Being Human By Alastair Morgan

Being Human by Alastair Morgan


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Summary

Attempts to shed fresh light on the intersections between mental health, mental distress and society. This work provides a statement of the importance of thinking through the humanities for any non-reductive understanding of the meaning of mental distress, and gives insights on a range of problems.

Being Human Summary

Being Human: Reflections on Mental Distress in Society by Alastair Morgan

This volume attempts to shed a new and different light on the intersections between mental health, mental distress and society, without offering any programmatic methodology or declaration of intent. An array of critical voices from across various disciplines in the humanities (including philosophy, psychiatry, psychology, history and literature) are brought to bear upon the subject of mental distress as a form of life that appears within particular social and cultural environments. Being Human provides a powerful statement of the importance of thinking through the humanities for any non-reductive understanding of the meaning of mental distress, and gives compelling insights on a range of problems including; the understanding and representation of mental distress, the history of symptoms and critiques of psychiatry, and what a critical practice within mental health care means.At the heart of this collection lies a concern with the experience of mental distress as central to any understanding of what it means to be human. This book will be of interest to all those involved in the wider mental health field, including, academics, practitioners, service users and families and carers.Students and academics working within the humanities as a whole, particularly those interested in the experience of mental distress, will find this volume to be a key point of entry for current issues of debate.

Being Human Reviews

As a mental health professional who struggles to practice within a culture and mental health services in which the dominant discourses revolve around the medical model, it is immensely refreshing to read a range of voices from across several professional disciplines (e.g. philosophy, psychiatry, psychology, history and literature) that are keen to understand mental distress in a different and more holistic way. Actually, it is refreshing, simply, to read of an attempt to create spaces to think and 'reflect in an atmosphere of genuine enquiry and dialogue' (Morgan p1). This commitment to thinking and dialogue in a spirit of openness and exploration made a significant impact on me. Rachel Freeth, Psychiatrist, Ipnosis No 33, 2008.

About Alastair Morgan

Alastair Morgan is a senior lecturer at the University of Manchester, UK. He has worked in the mental health field for a number of years, and is also a trained philosopher with a particular interest in Critical Theory and the philosophy of T.W. Adorno. His publications include Adorno's Concept of Life (Bloomsbury Press), and he is co-author of Values and Ethics in Mental Health: An exploration for practice ( Palgrave MacMillan, forthcoming, 2015).

Table of Contents

Introduction. Alastair Morgan Part One: Understanding and Representing Mental Distress1. Feelings, Beliefs and Being Human. John Cromby2. Towards a Critical Perspective on ANarrative LossA in Schizophrenia. Phil Thomas3. Constructions, Reconstructions and Deconstructions of Mental Health. Ian Parker4. The Authority of Lived Experience. Alastair Morgan5. Philosophy and Psyche: What can philosophy tell psychology, psychiatry and psychotherapy? Miles Clapha Part Two: Symptoms in Society6. The role of Tricksters in Challenging Psychiatry. Helen Spandler7. Writing From the Asylum: A Re-Assessment of Female Patients in the History of Psychiatry In France. Susannah Wilson8. Mirrors of Shame: the Act of Shaming and the Spectacle of Female Shame. Jocelyn Catty9. Symptoms in Society. The Cultural Significance of Fatigue in Victorian Society. Chris Ward10. Artaud's Madness: The Absence of Work? Patrick CallaghanPart Three: Critical Reflections on Practice11. A Phenomenological Encounter: Prelude to a Mental Health Assessment in a Magistrates Cells. Dave R. Wilson12. Opening up Space for Dissension: A Questioning Psychology. Bob Diamond13. Clinical Psychology and Truth. David Smail

Additional information

GOR002351989
9781906254063
1906254060
Being Human: Reflections on Mental Distress in Society by Alastair Morgan
Used - Very Good
Paperback
PCCS Books
20080908
213
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Being Human