The Female Malady
Women, Madness and English Culture, 1830-1980
- Author
- Elaine Showalter
Regular price
£14.99
Regular price
Sale price
£14.99
Unit price
/
per
We we're unable to submit your request, please try again later.
Thank you. An email will be sent when this product is back in stock.
Invalid email entered
In this informative, timely and often harrowing study, Elaine Showalter demonstrates how cultural ideas about 'proper' feminine behaviour have shaped the definition and treatment of female insanity for 150 years, and given mental disorder in women specifically sexual connotations. Along with vivid portraits of the men who dominated psychiatry, and descriptions of the therapeutic practices that were used to bring women 'to their senses', she draws on diaries and narratives by inmates, and fiction from Mary Wollstonecraft to Doris Lessing, to supply a cultural perspective usually missing from studies of mental illness.
Highly original and beautifully written, The Female Malady is a vital counter-interpretation of madness in women, showing how it is a consequence of, rather than a deviation from, the traditional female role.
Highly original and beautifully written, The Female Malady is a vital counter-interpretation of madness in women, showing how it is a consequence of, rather than a deviation from, the traditional female role.
- ASM
- CAN
- GUM
- MEX
- MNP
- UMI
- FSM
- MHL
- PHL
- PRI
- USA
- VIR
- Published: May 07 1987
- Pages: 320
- 208 x 128mm
- ISBN: 9780860688693
Press Reviews
- ROY PORTER, WELLCOME INSTITUTE FOR THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE
She writes with penetration, precision and passion. This book is essential reading for all those concerned with what psychiatry has done to women, and what new psychiatry could do for them