【狂気の文学:障害学とメンタルヘルス】
Literatures of Madness 1st ed. 2018(Literary Disability Studies) H 287 p. 18
目次
Introduction: Breathing in Airless Spaces Elizabeth J. Donaldson Part I: Mad Community 1 Coming Out Mad, Coming Out Disabled Elizabeth Brewer 2 Going Barefoot: Mad Affiliation, Identity Politics, and Eros PhebeAnn M. Wolframe 3 “Hundreds of People Like Me”: A Search for a Mad Community in The Bell Jar Rose Miyatsu 4 Writing Madness in Indigenous Literature: A Hesitation Erin Soros Part II: Mad History 5 “Is the young lady mad?”: Psychiatric Disability in Louisa May Alcott’s Fiction Karen Valerius 6 The Snake Pit: Mary Jane Ward’s Asylum Fiction and Mental Health Advocacy Elizabeth J. Donaldson 7 Alcoholic, Mad, Disabled: Constructing Lesbian Identity in Ann Bannon’s “Beebo Brinker Chronicles” Tatiana Prorokova 8 Seeing Words, Hearing Voices: Hannah Weiner, Dora García, and the Poetic Performance of Radical Dis/Humanism Andrew McEwan Part III: Mad Survival 9 “My Difference Is Not My [Mental] Sickness”: Ethnicity and Erasure in Joanne Greenberg’s Jewish American Life Writing Gail Berkeley Sherman 10 Resistance, Suffering, and Psychiatric Disability in Jerry Pinto’s Em and the Big Hoom and Amandeep Sandhu’s Sepia Leaves Srikanth Mallavarapu 11 Mental Disability and Social Value in Michelle Cliff’s Abeng Drew Holladay 12 It Doesn’t Add Up: Mental Illness in Paul Hornschemeier’s Mother Come Home Jessica Gross
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