The omnipresent psychiatric narrative of mental illness has always had its counter-narrative – the life stories of people labelled mad. The relationship between these two accounts has always been one of domination: mad voices have been – and continue to be – not heard, overwritten, silenced or even erased in the course of psychiatric treatment. As survivor researchers who have had these kinds of experiences, we wish to discuss parallels between this tradition and some contemporary academic efforts that claim to disrupt it
Mad stories, particularly in the context of biomedical institutions beyond the West, have rarely bee...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
This research interrogated the potential of voice in digital media for people living with mental ill...
This interdisciplinary volume brings together new research that broadens our understanding of the mu...
Popular misconceptions about the danger of madness have undermined mentally ill people’s struggle fo...
This paper charts the background to a project which aimed to map the knowledge being generated acros...
This dissertation examines how competing narratives related to madness and mental health can provide...
This autoethnography uses narrative inquiry within an anticolonial theoretical framework. As a White...
This article explores lived experiences and insights of five people with long-term 'mental health pr...
This paper examines the correspondence, manuscripts, and speeches of ex-mental patient activists. I ...
This article presents an autoethnography in the form of a short story of the experiences of a mental...
This article addresses the controversy associated with the construct schizophrenia/psychosis/madness...
This article draws on contemporary and classical psycho–political theorists to conceptualise ‘mental...
There is growing recognition that psychiatric consumer, survivor or ex-patient perspectives are not ...
Psychiatric frameworks are used as the primary lens in the Western world to understand, define, desc...
Mad stories, particularly in the context of biomedical institutions beyond the West, have rarely bee...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
This research interrogated the potential of voice in digital media for people living with mental ill...
This interdisciplinary volume brings together new research that broadens our understanding of the mu...
Popular misconceptions about the danger of madness have undermined mentally ill people’s struggle fo...
This paper charts the background to a project which aimed to map the knowledge being generated acros...
This dissertation examines how competing narratives related to madness and mental health can provide...
This autoethnography uses narrative inquiry within an anticolonial theoretical framework. As a White...
This article explores lived experiences and insights of five people with long-term 'mental health pr...
This paper examines the correspondence, manuscripts, and speeches of ex-mental patient activists. I ...
This article presents an autoethnography in the form of a short story of the experiences of a mental...
This article addresses the controversy associated with the construct schizophrenia/psychosis/madness...
This article draws on contemporary and classical psycho–political theorists to conceptualise ‘mental...
There is growing recognition that psychiatric consumer, survivor or ex-patient perspectives are not ...
Psychiatric frameworks are used as the primary lens in the Western world to understand, define, desc...
Mad stories, particularly in the context of biomedical institutions beyond the West, have rarely bee...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
This research interrogated the potential of voice in digital media for people living with mental ill...