Women and MadnessHarcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1989 - 359 pagine Feminist Icon Phyllis Chesler's Pioneering Work, Women and Madness, Remains Startlingly relevant today, over thirty years since its initial publication in 1972. With over 2.5 million copies sold, this seminal book is unanimously regarded as the definitive work on the subject of women's psychology. In this new edition, Chesler's original research and findings are supported by her perspectives on today's issues related to the subjects in the original book including: eating disorders, postpartum depression, biological psychiatry, important feminist political findings, female genital mutilation, and more. Book jacket. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 53
Pagina 18
... physical nurturance and a legacy of power and humanity from adults of their own sex ( " mothers " ) . Most mothers prefer sons to daughters17 and are more physically and domestically nurturant to them . Within modern society , woman's ...
... physical nurturance and a legacy of power and humanity from adults of their own sex ( " mothers " ) . Most mothers prefer sons to daughters17 and are more physically and domestically nurturant to them . Within modern society , woman's ...
Pagina 45
... physically - either directly , to the " significant others " in their lives , or indirectly , through physical and athletic prowess . It is safer for women to become " depressed " than physi- cally violent . Physically violent women ...
... physically - either directly , to the " significant others " in their lives , or indirectly , through physical and athletic prowess . It is safer for women to become " depressed " than physi- cally violent . Physically violent women ...
Pagina 292
... physical strength or the implied threat of physical , military , or economic strength , i.e. , " po- litical " power ) , women have little power with which to either avoid or commit violence . Women traditionally are physically weak and ...
... physical strength or the implied threat of physical , military , or economic strength , i.e. , " po- litical " power ) , women have little power with which to either avoid or commit violence . Women traditionally are physically weak and ...
Sommario
FIVE | 48 |
Schizophrenia in Three Studies | 49 |
THE CLINICIANS | 57 |
Copyright | |
11 sezioni non visualizzate
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Parole e frasi comuni
adult Amazon American and/or Athena behavior biological black women CARMEN cent child clinical clinicians commit crazy culture daughters Demeter depressed Dionysus DORIS economic Elizabeth Packard Ellen West experience father fear feel female children female patients female role female schizophrenics feminine feminist Freud girl heterosexual homosexuals human husband incest institution involved Joan lesbians male homosexuals male therapists marriage married masculine maternal mental asylums mental health mental patients mentally ill mother mythology myths never NIMH normal nurturance oppression orgasm outpatient patriarchal Persephone PHYLLIS Phyllis Chesler physical Plath political private therapy professional prostitution Psyche psychiatrically hospitalized psychiatrists psychological psychotherapy punished rape Reich schizophrenics sex-role sexual SHIRLEY social society standard of mental Sylvia Plath Szasz talk thing Third World women Thomas Szasz told traditional treatment views Virgin white women Wilhelm Reich witches wives woman Women and Madness York Zelda Zelda Fitzgerald