Women and MadnessChicago Review Press, 4 set 2018 - 432 pagine Feminist icon Phyllis Chesler's pioneering work, Women and Madness, remains startlingly relevant today, nearly fifty years since its first publication in 1972. With over 2.5 million copies sold, this landmark book is unanimously regarded as the definitive work on the subject of women's psychology. Now back in print, this completely revised and updated edition adds perspectives on eating disorders, postpartum depression, biological psychology, important feminist political findings, female genital mutilation, and more. |
Dall'interno del libro
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... be? How lled? How free does she really feel, or how held back? ... It's about the collision between self and culture, female desire unleashed in a world that's still deeply ambivalent about female power and that manages.
... be? How lled? How free does she really feel, or how held back? ... It's about the collision between self and culture, female desire unleashed in a world that's still deeply ambivalent about female power and that manages.
Pagina
... feeling “sexually aroused while in the presence of a client.” Between 64 and 78 percent admitted they were “angry” at their patients for a variety of reasons; nearly a third reported “hating” a client, and 46 percent said they had been ...
... feeling “sexually aroused while in the presence of a client.” Between 64 and 78 percent admitted they were “angry” at their patients for a variety of reasons; nearly a third reported “hating” a client, and 46 percent said they had been ...
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... feel they have to be—as a way of distancing themselves from a despised group. For example, one 1990 study conrmed that there was less gender-stereotyping among psychiatrists in 1990 than in 1970. However, more of the female ...
... feel they have to be—as a way of distancing themselves from a despised group. For example, one 1990 study conrmed that there was less gender-stereotyping among psychiatrists in 1990 than in 1970. However, more of the female ...
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... feel “deeply betrayed” by their mothers. Such daughters feel that they have been “offered as a sacrice in order to propitiate a powerful male, and they despise their mothers.” ey also learn to expect no help from other women. Some ...
... feel “deeply betrayed” by their mothers. Such daughters feel that they have been “offered as a sacrice in order to propitiate a powerful male, and they despise their mothers.” ey also learn to expect no help from other women. Some ...
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... feeling helpless about money (and perhaps resentful about the cost of therapy) than to signify feelings about therapy per se ... feel pride in their ability to pay their bills. People with less money can nd it very hard to take what they ...
... feeling helpless about money (and perhaps resentful about the cost of therapy) than to signify feelings about therapy per se ... feel pride in their ability to pay their bills. People with less money can nd it very hard to take what they ...
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