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. |
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... month—sometimes, every day. Emboldened by feminism, we created our own organizations where we and our ideas would be welcome and in which we could teach ourselves and each other what we needed to know. We hadn't learned it elsewhere ...
... month—sometimes, every day. Emboldened by feminism, we created our own organizations where we and our ideas would be welcome and in which we could teach ourselves and each other what we needed to know. We hadn't learned it elsewhere ...
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... months and/or within a year, analysands socialized and worked with their analysts, and boundaries blurred. Freud himself analyzed his own daughter, Anna, and, not surprisingly, denied that incestuous dynamics existed in the family: in ...
... months and/or within a year, analysands socialized and worked with their analysts, and boundaries blurred. Freud himself analyzed his own daughter, Anna, and, not surprisingly, denied that incestuous dynamics existed in the family: in ...
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... months.” According to Dr. Keith Hoeller, editor of the Review of Existential Psychology and Psychiatry, “ e most dangerous political movement in America is the mental health movement. Family members pose as advocates for the so-called ...
... months.” According to Dr. Keith Hoeller, editor of the Review of Existential Psychology and Psychiatry, “ e most dangerous political movement in America is the mental health movement. Family members pose as advocates for the so-called ...
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... months to get over the effects of my incarceration ... rough companionship, my appetite came back; I could sleep in peace, and there was nobody to annoy me. ere were no maniacal shrieks to make me shudder; no attendants to yell out ...
... months to get over the effects of my incarceration ... rough companionship, my appetite came back; I could sleep in peace, and there was nobody to annoy me. ere were no maniacal shrieks to make me shudder; no attendants to yell out ...
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... her excellent biography of Zelda Fitzgerald, 10 quotes Scott's letter to Dr. Forel, one of Zelda's psychiatrists, in which Scott complains that for the last six months, Zelda had taken no interest in their child.* Dr. Forel.
... her excellent biography of Zelda Fitzgerald, 10 quotes Scott's letter to Dr. Forel, one of Zelda's psychiatrists, in which Scott complains that for the last six months, Zelda had taken no interest in their child.* Dr. Forel.
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