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7 Is It Normal or PMS? Women’s Strategies in Negotiating and Resisting Negative Premenstrual Change

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  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Preface ix
  4. Introduction: Science, Social (In)Justice, and Mental Health 1
  5. PART ONE Foregrounding Social Justice Theorizing
  6. 1 “Women and Madness” Revisited: The Promise of Intersectional and Mad Studies Frameworks 31
  7. 2 A “Third Space” for Doing Social Justice Research 60
  8. 3 Global Psychiatrization and Psychic Colonization: The Coloniality of Global Mental Health 87
  9. PART TWO Decolonizing Research and Practice
  10. 4 Mental Health in Africa: Human Rights Approaches to Decolonization 113
  11. 5 Dancing with Complexity: Decolonization and Social Justice Dialogues 138
  12. 6 Melq’ilwiye (Coming Together): Re-imagining Mental Health for Urban Indigenous Youth through Intersections of Identity, Sovereignty, and Resistance 165
  13. PART THREE Gendering, Discourse, and Power
  14. 7 Is It Normal or PMS? Women’s Strategies in Negotiating and Resisting Negative Premenstrual Change 195
  15. 8 Depression in Workplaces: Governmentality, Feminist Analysis, and Neoliberalism 229
  16. 9 Gender Non-conformity or Psychiatric Non-compliance? How Organized Non-compliance Can Offer a Future without Psychiatry 255
  17. PART FOUR Media as a Site of Social (In)Justice
  18. 10 (De)Pathologization: Transsexuality, Gynecomastia, and the Negotiation of Mental Health Diagnoses in Online Communities 283
  19. 11 “One in Five”: The Prevalence Problematic in Mental Illness Discourse 312
  20. 12 Madness in the Media: An Intersectional Analysis of Educational Films and Television Programming, 1940–69 333
  21. 13 Ethics, Research, and Advocacy: The Experiences of the NAOMI Patients Association in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside 365
  22. 14 Using Arts-Based Methods to Create Research Spaces That Encourage Meaningful Dialogue 386
  23. 15 Disrupting Dominant Discourses: Rethinking Services and Systems for Women with Experiences of Abuse 413
  24. 16 An Intersectionality Approach to Resilience Research: Centring Structural Analysis, Resistance, and Social Justice 443
  25. Contributors 475
  26. Index 487
Heruntergeladen am 1.5.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.3138/9781442619708-009/html?lang=de
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