As American Melancholy reveals, if you read about depression anywhere today--medical journal, popular magazine, National Institute of Mental Health pamphlet, or pharmaceutical company drug promotional literature--you will find three main pieces of information either explicitly stated or strongly implied: depression is a disease (like any other physical disease); it is extraordinarily prevalent in the world; and it occurs about twice as frequently in women as in men. Yet, depression was not classified as a disease until the 1980 publication of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-III (DSM-III). How is it that such an illness, thought to affect between 14 and 17 million Americans, was not specifically defined until the late twentieth century? American Melancholy traces the growth of depression as an object of medical study and as a consumer commodity and illustrates how and why depression came to be such a huge medical, social, and cultural phenomenon. It is the first book to address gender issues in the construction of depression, explores key questions of how its diagnosis was developed, how it has been used, and how we should question its application in American society.
Cheng proposes that racial identification is itself already a melancholic act--a social category that is imaginatively supported through a dynamic of loss and compensation, by which the racial other is at once rejected and retained.
Lewis , Clayton W. " Style in Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia . " Southern Review 14 ( Autumn 1978 ) : 668–76 . Lewis , Thomas . The Fairfax Line : Thomas Lewis's Journal of 1726. Ed . John W. Wayland . New Market , Va .
The Elizabethan Malady: A Study of Melancholia in English Literature from 1580–1642. East Lansing: Michigan State College Press, 1951. Bainbridge, William Sims. “Religious Insanity in America: The Official Nineteenth Century Theory.
After Eddie Lincoln's death in 1850, a recently arrived minister in Springfield, the Reverend James Smith, conducted the boy's funeral. Smith often visited the Lincoln home at the corner of Eighth and Jackson. Like Lincoln, Smith had ...
The Melancholy Lens offers a detailed look at biographical and psychological factors discernible in the art of Maya Deren, Stan Brakhage, Gregory Markopoulos, Robert Beavers, and Ernie Gehr with an aim toward a greater understanding of ...
Singleton develops the concept of "cultural melancholy" as a response to scholarship that calls for the separation of critical race studies and psychoanalysis, excludes queer theoretical approaches from readings of African American ...
In Racial Melancholia, Racial Dissociation critic David L. Eng and psychotherapist Shinhee Han draw on case histories from the mid-1990s to the present to explore the social and psychic predicaments of Asian American young adults from ...
Why, this book asks, has the incidence of depression been on such an increase in the last 50 years, if our basic biology hasn't changed as rapidly?
When Bergreen interviewed James T. Maher about a phone conversation that took place about 1971 between Berlin and Maher's collaborator Alec Wilder, Berlin reportedly again stated, “I only wrote six or eight songs.
The book traces the progress of the way Californian identity is portrayed in Joan Didion’s novels, starting with the first two in which California plays the central role, Run River and Play It As It Lays, through A Book of Common Prayer ...