Prozac or Prosaic Diaries?: The Gendering of Psychiatric Disability in Depression Memoirs

Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 24 (4):285-298 (2017)
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Abstract

The stories we tell of psychiatric disability1 and gender play a crucial role not only in the experience of psychiatric disorders, but in who disordered individuals are in the most literal sense. Recent theories of the self—so-called narrative self-constitution views, or “narrative theories”—contend that the self is, fundamentally, constituted by a narrative one tells about oneself. Furthermore, this narrative almost certainly absorbs elements from surrounding cultural scripts. Thus, narrative self-constitution views can shed light on some of the ways in which cultural...

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Ginger A. Hoffman
Saint Joseph's University of Pennsylvania
Jennifer Hansen
St. Lawrence University

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