Women and Madness

Women and Madness is a 1972 book by Phyllis Chesler.

Chesler argues that women are negatively impacted by psychiatry and psychology due to the dominance of men in those fields. The work explores the effects on women in same-sex relationships and psychiatry/psychology in the third world.[1] Claudia Pitts of National Louis University wrote that the book was "one of the earliest works of the second wave feminist movement to address issues such as the mistreatment of women, particularly in rape and incest; female role models; and spirituality in mental health services."[2] Miriam Greenspan of the Los Angeles Review of Books described it as "a cultural watershed exposing how male-dominated psychiatry damages women."[3]

Background

As part of the writing process, Chesler conducted interviews.[4]

Contents

In the book Chesler includes an analysis of famous women who had negative endings to their lives and mythological stories from Western tradition involving female characters with negative endings, as well as quotations from psychotherapists and male authors and quotes from female authors, some of whom being feminists. She also included statistics from hospitals.[4]

Reception

Bard College stated that the book "has been reprinted many times in the United States and internationally."[5]

Reviews

Adrienne Rich, in an article in The New York Times, concluded that Women and Madness "is a pioneer contribution to the feminization of psychiatric thinking and practice."[1] Rich stated that the book at times makes an assumption that the reader is already familiar with the relevant fields.[1]

Roland Jaccard of Le Monde wrote that "like any important book, Women and Madness has the immense merit of 'troubling the world's sleep.'"[6]

Salvatore R. Maddi wrote in The Saturday Review that it is "an extremely important book, a signal that the women's liberation movement is coming of age."[4]

gollark: Early attempts at AI back in the last millennium tried to create AIs by giving them logical reasoning abilities and a large set of facts. This didn't really work; they did some things, hit the limits of the facts they had, and didn't do anything very interesting.
gollark: They don't even have *memory* - you just train the model a bunch, keep that around, feed it data, and then get the results; next time you want data out, you use the original model from the training phase.
gollark: They don't really have goals, only the training code does, and that goal is something like "maximize prediction accuracy with respect to the data".
gollark: They're big networks which are trained to detect patterns, sometimes very deep ones, in large amounts of data.
gollark: Current AI stuff doesn't have "minds" comparable to that of humans.

References

  1. Rich, Adrienne (1972-12-31). "Women and Madness". The New York Times.
  2. Pitts, Claudia (2017). "Phyllis Chesler – A Life on Behalf of Women". Women & Therapy. 40 (3–4: Radical Visionaries: Feminist Therapy Pioneers 1970–1975): 288–300. doi:10.1080/02703149.2017.1241561. - Published online on January 23, 2017
  3. Greenspan, Miriam. "The Hard-Earned Lessons of a Born Maverick". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 2019-12-28.
  4. Maddi, Salvatore R. (1972-12-23). "On Women---II: The Couch as Rack Women and Madness, by Phyllis Chesler". The Saturday Review (U.S.): 61–62.
  5. "PSYCHOLOGIST, AUTHOR, AND BARD ALUMNA PHYLLIS CHESLER, WHO WILL SPEAK AT BARD COLLEGE ON WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21". Bard College. 2001-03-02. Retrieved 2019-12-27.
  6. Jaccard, Roland. "Les femmes et la folie" Le Monde. June 13, 1975. Accessed 2016-06-16. The quote in French reads: "Réquisitoire violent et tendre, juste et injuste à la fois, Les femmes et la folie, comme tout livre important, a l'immense mérite de 'troubler le sommeil du monde'."

Further reading

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