Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University

Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University

10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical View Online Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow 1. Pilgrim, David, Rogers, Anne: A sociology of mental health and illness. Open University Press, Maidenhead (2005). 2. Bowers, Len: The social nature of mental illness. Routledge, London (2000). 3. Busfield, Joan: Rethinking the sociology of mental health. Blackwell, Oxford (2000). 4. Cockerham, William C.: Sociology of mental disorder. Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, N.J. (2011). 5. Ingleby, David: Critical psychiatry: the politics of mental health. Free Association Books, London (2004). 6. Porter, Roy: The Faber book of madness. Faber, London (2003). 1/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University 7. Prior, Lindsay: The social organization of mental illness. Sage, London (1993). 8. Foucault, Michel: Madness and civilization: a history of insanity in the Age of Reason. Routledge, London (2001). 9. Berrios, G. E., Freeman, Hugh, Royal College of Psychiatrists: 150 years of British psychiatry: 1841-1991. Gaskell, London (1991). 10. Gilman, Sander L.: Difference and pathology: stereotypes of sexuality, race, and madness. Cornell University Press, Ithaca (1985). 11. Porter, Roy: A social history of madness: stories of the insane. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London (1987). 12. Porter, Roy: The Faber book of madness. Faber, London (2003). 13. Scull, Andrew T.: Social order-mental disorder: Anglo-American psychiatry in historical perspective. Routledge, London (1989). 14. Scull, Andrew T.: The most solitary of afflictions: madness and society in Britain 1700-1900. Yale U.P., New Haven (1993). 2/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University 15. Turner, Bryan S., Samson, Colin: Medical power and social knowledge. Sage, London (1995). 16. Prior, Lindsay: The social organization of mental illness. Sage, London (1993). 17. Bowers, Len: The social nature of mental illness. Routledge, London (2000). 18. Busfield, Joan: Rethinking the sociology of mental health. Blackwell, Oxford (2000). 19. Carpenter, M.: ‘It’s a small world’: mental health policy under welfare capitalism since 1945. Sociology of Health and Illness. 22, 602–620 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.00222. 20. Clare, Anthony W.: Psychiatry in dissent: controversial issues in thought and practice. Routledge, London (2003). 21. Foucault, Michel: Madness and civilization: a history of insanity in the Age of Reason. Routledge, London (2001). 22. 3/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University Goffman, Erving: Asylums: essays on the social situation of mental patients and other inmates. Aldine Transaction, New Brunswick, N.J. (2007). 23. Jones, Kathleen: Asylums and after: from the early 18th century to the 1990s : a revised history of the mental health services. Athlone P., London (1993). 24. Ingleby, David: Critical psychiatry: the politics of mental health. Free Association Books, London (2004). 25. Johnson, T. J.: Professions and power. Macmillan, London (1972). 26. Pilgrim, David, Rogers, Anne: A sociology of mental health and illness. Open University Press, Maidenhead (2005). 27. Rogers, Anne, Pilgrim, David: Mental health policy in Britain. Palgrave, Basingstoke (2001). 28. Scott, S.: Revisiting the Total Institution: Performative Regulation in the Reinventive Institution. Sociology. 44, 213–231 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038509357198. 29. Heller, Tom, Open University: Mental health matters: a reader. Macmillan in association with the Open University, Basingstoke (1996). 4/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University 30. American Psychiatric Association, American Psychiatric Association: Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders: DSM-IV-TR. American Psychiatric Association, Washington, D.C. (2000). 31. Beer, M.D.: Psychosis: from mental disorder to disease concept. History of Psychiatry. 6, 177–200 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1177/0957154X9500602204. 32. Bendelow, Gillian: Health, emotion and the body. Polity, Cambridge (2008). 33. Colombo, A., Bendelow, G., Fulford, B., Williams, S.: Evaluating the influence of implicit models of mental disorder on processes of shared decision making within community-based multi-disciplinary teams. Social Science & Medicine. 56, 1557–1570 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00156-9. 34. Clare, Anthony W.: Psychiatry in dissent: controversial issues in thought and practice. Tavistock, London (1980). 35. Double, D.: The limits of psychiatry. BMJ. 324, 900–904 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.324.7342.900. 36. Guze, S.B.: Biological psychiatry: is there any other kind?*. Psychological Medicine. 19, (2009). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291700012356. 5/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University 37. Ingleby, David: Critical psychiatry: the politics of mental health. Free Association Books, London (2004). 38. Read, John, Mosher, Loren R., Bentall, Richard P.: Models of madness: psychological, social and biological approaches to schizophrenia. Brunner-Routledge, New York, N.Y. (2004). 39. Pilgrim, David, Rogers, Anne: A sociology of mental health and illness. Open University Press, Maidenhead (2005). 40. Rogers, Anne, Pilgrim, David: Mental health policy in Britain. Palgrave, Basingstoke (2001). 41. Wilson, M.: DSM-III and the transformation of American psychiatry: a history. The American Journal of Psychiatry. 150,. 42. Ingleby, David: Critical psychiatry: the politics of mental health. Free Association Books, London (2004). 43. Bracken, Patrick: Trauma: culture, meaning and philosophy. Whurr, London (2002). 44. Bocock, Robert: Sigmund Freud. Ellis Horwood (1983). 6/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University 45. Clare, Anthony W.: Psychiatry in dissent: controversial issues in thought and practice. Tavistock, London (1980). 46. Coppock, Vicki, Hopton, John: Critical Perspectives on Mental Health. Routledge, London (2000). 47. Craib, Ian: Psychoanalysis and social theory. Harvester Wheatsheaf, Hemel Hempstead (1989). 48. Fisher, Alec: Critical thinking: an introduction. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001). 49. Freud, Sigmund, Strachey, James, Dickson, Albert: Civilization, society and religion: group psychology, civilization and its discontents and other works. Penguin, Harmondsworth (1991). 50. Foucault, Michel: Madness and civilization: a history of insanity in the Age of Reason. Routledge, London (2001). 51. Fu ̈ redi, Frank: Therapy culture: cultivating vulnerability in an uncertain age. Routledge, London (2004). 7/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University 52. Freud, Sigmund, Gay, Peter: The Freud reader. Vintage, London (1995). 53. Gilman, Sander L.: The case of Sigmund Freud: medicine and identity at the fin de siecle. Johns Hopkins U.P., Baltimore (1993). 54. Newnes, Craig, Holmes, Guy, Dunn, Cailzie: This is madness: a critical look at psychiatry and the future of mental health services. PCCS, Ross-on-Wye (1999). 55. Newnes, Craig, Holmes, Guy, Dunn, Cailzie: This is madness too: critical perspectives on mental health services. PCCS, Ross-on-Wye (2001). 56. Rose, Nikolas S.: Inventing our selves: psychology, power, and personhood. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England (1996). 57. Rose, Nikolas S.: Governing the soul: the shaping of the private self. Free Association, London (1999). 58. Samson, C.: The fracturing of medical dominance in British psychiatry? Sociology of Health and Illness. 17, 245–268 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.ep10933403. 59. 8/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University Scheff, Thomas J.: Being mentally ill: a sociological theory. Aldine de Gruyter, New York (1999). 60. Heller, Tom, Open University: Mental health matters: a reader. Macmillan in association with the Open University, Basingstoke (1996). 61. Rosenhan, D.L.: On Being Sane in Insane Places. Science. 179, 250–258 (1973). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.179.4070.250. 62. Busfield, Joan: Rethinking the sociology of mental health. Blackwell, Oxford (2000). 63. Conrad, Peter: The medicalization of society: on the transformation of human conditions into treatable disorders. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Md (2007). 64. Conrad, P.: Medicalization and Social Control. Annual Review of Sociology. 18, 209–232 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.so.18.080192.001233. 65. Dallaire, B., McCubbin, M., Morin, P., Cohen, D.: Civil commitment due to mental illness and dangerousness: the union of law and psychiatry within a treatment-control system. Sociology of Health and Illness. 22, 679–699 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.00226. 66. Goffman, Erving: Asylums: essays on the social situation of mental patients and other 9/15 10/02/21 Madness and Society Part 1: Theoretical Debates - L4034 - Gillian Bendelow | Sussex University inmates. Penguin, London (1991). 67. Guide to the Mental Health Act. 68. Illich, Ivan: Medical Nemesis: the Expropriation of Health. Calder & Boyars (1975). 69. Petersen, Alan R., Bunton, Robin: Foucault, health and medicine. Routledge, London (1997). 70. Petersen, Alan R., Bunton,

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