This collection explores the discursive production and treatment of mental distress as it is mediated by gender and race in different institutional contexts. Featuring analyses of the prison, the psychiatric hospital, immigration detention, and other locales, this book explores the multiple interlocking oppressions that result in the diagnosis and medical, psychological, and psychiatric treatment of individuals constituted as mentally ill at various historical moments and across institutional spaces. Contributors unpack how feminine, masculine, and transgender bodies are made up as mentally ill/sick/deviant by way of biomedical and institutional knowledges and discourses and are intervened upon by different institutional and expert authorities.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Introduction: Psy, gender, and containment
Jennifer M. Kilty & Erin Dej
Historical Psy Discourses Revisited
Chapter 2: Sickening institutions: A feminist sociological analysis and critique of religion, medicine and psychiatry
Heidi Rimke
Chapter 3: Traditions of colonial and eugenic violence: Immigration detention in Canada
Ameil Joseph
Chapter 4: Gender, madness, and the legacies of the Prisons Information Group (GIP)
Michael Rembis
Section 2: Containing Bodies
Chapter 5: Patients perspective on mechanical restraints in acute and emergency psychiatric settings: A poststructural feminist analysis
Dave Holmes, Jean Daniel Jacob, D?sir? Rioux & Pascale Corneau