In this article, three scholars jointly investigate questions of Western colonization and mental health. While their areas of interest and experience vary, the authors discuss oppression as a common thread connecting their ideas about mental health and its medicalization. In line with Toyosaki et al. (2009), the researchers did a community autoethnography, performing written dialogue as a dynamic research method. Using a sequential model, Kelly Limes Taylor wrote about her experience, passed it on to Rita Sørly and Bengt Karlsson. Karlsson added his story to the previous writing, and he passed it on to Sørly for further addition of stories. Sørly passed the stories added to Limes Taylor, which added new reflections. Together, the three rese...
Pills hidden under tongues, inside socks, flushed down toilets. Pretending to ‘ feel better’ , prete...
This research is a culmination of my experience with Madness and its presence in the world. I questi...
The intersectional social construction of race and madness has significantly shaped the lived experi...
In this article, three scholars jointly investigate questions of Western colonization and mental hea...
In this article, three scholars jointly investigate questions of Western colonization and mental hea...
In this article, three scholars jointly investigate questions of Western colonization and mental hea...
This thesis develops and contributes to an emerging field of postcolonial critique in the mental hea...
This autoethnography uses narrative inquiry within an anticolonial theoretical framework. As a White...
We have each been educated in a system that grew out of, and reflects, 500 years of colonialism, and...
This autoethnography uses narrative inquiry within an anticolonial theoretical framework. As a White...
This paper explores the interface between Mad Studies and Indigenous ways of knowing, and argues tha...
The recent circulation of ‘mental health literacy’ texts in mainstream North American media conceptu...
This thesis is based on 13 months of ethnographic fieldwork with groups of mental-health activists i...
This paper provides a written narrative of how socio-political marginalization from colonial interna...
Drawing on the personal stories of people of colour who have been in contact with psychiatric spaces...
Pills hidden under tongues, inside socks, flushed down toilets. Pretending to ‘ feel better’ , prete...
This research is a culmination of my experience with Madness and its presence in the world. I questi...
The intersectional social construction of race and madness has significantly shaped the lived experi...
In this article, three scholars jointly investigate questions of Western colonization and mental hea...
In this article, three scholars jointly investigate questions of Western colonization and mental hea...
In this article, three scholars jointly investigate questions of Western colonization and mental hea...
This thesis develops and contributes to an emerging field of postcolonial critique in the mental hea...
This autoethnography uses narrative inquiry within an anticolonial theoretical framework. As a White...
We have each been educated in a system that grew out of, and reflects, 500 years of colonialism, and...
This autoethnography uses narrative inquiry within an anticolonial theoretical framework. As a White...
This paper explores the interface between Mad Studies and Indigenous ways of knowing, and argues tha...
The recent circulation of ‘mental health literacy’ texts in mainstream North American media conceptu...
This thesis is based on 13 months of ethnographic fieldwork with groups of mental-health activists i...
This paper provides a written narrative of how socio-political marginalization from colonial interna...
Drawing on the personal stories of people of colour who have been in contact with psychiatric spaces...
Pills hidden under tongues, inside socks, flushed down toilets. Pretending to ‘ feel better’ , prete...
This research is a culmination of my experience with Madness and its presence in the world. I questi...
The intersectional social construction of race and madness has significantly shaped the lived experi...