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On Episode 150 of the Radically Genuine Podcast I interview Ethan Watters an investigative journalist and author. He is most widely known for his book “Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche” published in 2010. He has also appeared on a number of media outlets such as Good Morning America, Talk of the Nation, and CNN and written articles published in The New York Times Magazine, Spin, Details, Mother Jones, Glamour, GQ, Esquire, and the San Francisco Chronicle Magazine. Does our western conceptualization of mental illness actually create more harm than good? We explore how the export of Western mental health concepts is changing the nature of mental illness globally, examining the impact of Western narratives on depression, schizophrenia and PTSD in non-Western societies. The conversation critiques the assumption that Western therapy is universally applicable and discusses the medicalization of emotional distress in Western cultures.Chapters00:00 The Globalization of Mental Health09:28 The Cultural Construction of Mental Illness18:40 Altering Cultural Responses to Suffering25:52 The Importance of Cultural Context in Mental Health39:32 The Impact of Western Narratives on Trauma43:16 The Limitations of Western Notions of Healing45:30 The Medicalization of Emotional Distress in Western Societies47:48 Challenging the Immediate Intervention Paradigm53:19 Culture's Influence on Mental Health and Individual Choice RADICALLY GENUINE PODCASTDr. Roger McFillin / Radically Genuine WebsiteYouTube @RadicallyGenuineDr. Roger McFillin (@DrMcFillin) / XSubstack | Radically Genuine | Dr. Roger McFillinInstagram @radicallygenuineContact Radically GenuineConscious Clinician CollectivePLEASE SUPPORT OUR PARTNERS15% Off Pure Spectrum CBD (Code: RadicallyGenuine)10% off Lovetuner click here—-----------FREE DOWNLOAD! DISTRESS TOLERANCE SKILLS
Writer Ethan Watters joins Marcia Franklin to discuss the themes in his book, Urban Tribes, which looks at the ways in which young, unmarried Americans create their own sense of family. Ethan Watters has written about psychiatry and social psychology for 20 years. He has also taught writing at Berkeley, Stanford, and California College of the Arts. In 1994 he co-founded the San Francisco Writers' Grotto. In addition to several books, he's written about social trends for publications from Esquire to the New York Times Magazine, among other national and regional publications. He has also created pieces for Public Radio International's This American Life. Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast and visit the Dialogue website for more conversations that matter! Originally Aired: 12/18/2008 The interview is part of Dialogue's series, "Conversations from the Sun Valley Writers' Conference," and was taped at the 2008 conference. Since 1995, the conference has been bringing together some of the world's most well-known and illuminating authors to discuss literature and life.
Chapter 1 What's Crazy Like Us Book by Ethan Watters"Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche" is a book written by Ethan Watters. In this book, Watters explores the cultural impact of exporting Western ideas about mental illness and treatment to other countries. He argues that the globalization of American psychological concepts and treatment methods has cultural and societal consequences, often disregarding the influence of local beliefs, values, and practices related to mental health. Watters challenges the notion of a universal understanding and experience of mental illness, pointing out the dangers of imposing Western perspectives on mental health in diverse cultural contexts.In "Crazy Like Us," Watters specifically examines the influence of American psychology and psychiatric interventions following natural disasters, such as the 2004 tsunami in Sri Lanka, the 2008 earthquake in China, and the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. He sheds light on how Western concepts of mental health and trauma care can shape and alter local understanding, exacerbating or overlooking certain issues while imposing Western treatment models.The book serves as a critique of the homogenization of mental health treatment practices and a call for cultural sensitivity and awareness in addressing mental health globally. Watters argues that recovering societies should be empowered to preserve their unique cultural approaches to mental health and support systems.Chapter 2 Is Crazy Like Us Book A Good Book"Crazy Like Us" by Ethan Watters is generally well-regarded as a thought-provoking and insightful book. It explores how Western cultural ideas about mental illness have been exported and imposed on other countries, potentially influencing their understanding and treatment of mental health. It challenges some preconceived notions about mental illness and raises important questions about cultural diversity and the globalization of Western norms. Ultimately, whether it is a good book or not depends on your personal interests and perspectives.Chapter 3 Crazy Like Us Book by Ethan Watters Summary"Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche" is a book written by Ethan Watters. It explores the impact of Western cultural narratives and the spread of Western mental health concepts on other cultures around the world.The book argues that Western notions of mental illness and the way they are treated have become increasingly globalized, influencing and sometimes eclipsing native practices and beliefs about mental health. Watters focuses on four case studies, each representing a different region or country and examining how Western psychological theories and treatments have been adopted.The first case study takes place in Japan and explores the rise of eating disorders and self-harm among young Japanese women, which Watters argues can be attributed to the influence of Western media and an increasingly individualistic society. Watters also looks at the medicalization of mental health in Sri Lanka after the 2004 tsunami, demonstrating how Western approaches overshadowed traditional healing practices and created cultural conflict.The next case study takes place in Zanzibar, Tanzania, where Watters examines the introduction of Western models of depression treatment. He argues that this approach ignored the cultural context and spiritual beliefs of the local population, ultimately leading to limited effectiveness. Finally, Watters discusses the exportation of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) to other countries, particularly Cambodia, exploring how Western trauma narratives were not always relevant or helpful for those experiencing different cultural traumas.Throughout the book, Watters challenges...
The symptom pool is probably the single most important concept with respect to understanding mental illness. In short, the symptom pool is a culturally-bound collection of behavioral signals that can be used to communicate various degrees of distress. These signals are unconsciously added to the pool at the population level, and they are unconsciously manifested from the pool at the individual level. In this episode, I cite an example of how this might look from Ethan Watters's "Crazy like us". Social Media Facebook: https://facebook.com/profile.php?id=100090053889622 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/orion-taraban-070b45168/ Instagram: https://instagram.com/psyc.hacks Twitter: https://twitter.com/oriontaraban Website: https://oriontarabanpsyd.com Orion's Theme: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WrXBzQ2HDEQ Thinking of going to grad school? Check out STELLAR, my top-rated GRE self-study program based on the world's only empirically-validated test prep system. Use the code "PSYCH" for 10% off all membership plans: https://stellargre.com. Become a Stellar affiliate and earn a 10% commission for every membership purchased by a new student you conduct into the program: https://stellargre.tapfiliate.com. GRE Bites: https://www.youtube.com/@grebites4993 Become a Psychonaut and join PsycHack's member community: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSduXBjCHkLoo_y9ss2xzXw/join Book a paid consultation: https://oriontarabanpsyd.com/consultations Sound mixing/editing by: valntinomusic.com Presented by Orion Taraban, Psy.D. PsycHacks provides viewers with a brief, thought-provoking video several days a week on a variety of psychological topics, inspired by his clinical practice. The intention is for the core idea contained within each video to inspire viewers to see something about themselves or their world in a slightly different light. The ultimate mission of the channel is to reduce the amount of unnecessary suffering in the world. #psychology #mentalhealth #mentalhealthawareness
https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/book-review-crazy-like-us We talk a lot about falling biodiversity. Sometimes we apply the same metaphor to the human world, eg “falling linguistic biodiversity" when minority languages get replaced by English or whatever. In Crazy Like Us, Ethan Watters sounds the alarm about falling psychiatric biodiversity. Along with all the usual effects of globalization, everyone is starting to have the same mental illnesses, and to understand them in the same way. This is bad insofar as greater diversity of mental illness could teach us something about the process that generates them, and greater diversity of frameworks and responses could teach us something about how to treat them. He makes his point through four case studies, starting with: I. Anorexia In Hong Kong Until the 1990s, there was almost no anorexia in Hong Kong. There were lots of patriarchal beauty standards, everyone was very obsessed with being thin, but anorexia as a disease was basically unknown. At least this is the claim of Sing Lee, a Hong Kong psychiatrist who studied in the West. He learned about anorexia during his training in Britain, then went back to Hong Kong prepared to treat it. He couldn't find anybody. He tried really hard! He put out feelers, asking if anyone knew anybody who was having some kind of psychiatric problem where they were starving themselves. With apologies for the unintended offensive pun - nobody bit.
For decades, the definitions and treatments of mental illness exported by the United States have become international standards, and the result is a gradual flattening and homogenizing of the landscape of the human psyche around the world. The book points out that each mental illness varies with its culture and beliefs, and that the existence of such differences should not be ignored. The author expresses his concerns about the adoption of standardized criteria for the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness and reveals the ambition of drug companies to promote universal disease categories for profit.
Katie and Jesse bring on Ethan Watters, an author and freelance journalist who helped debunk the recovered-memory craze back in the 1990s, to discuss the most recent development in that area: an article in The Cut that Watters does not think does a good and accurate job relating the (scant) scientific evidence for recovered memories. The hosts and Watters also discuss certain arguable therapeutic parallels between the recovered-memory movement and treatment for youth gender dysphoria, as well as the general tendency of liberals to violate their "We
Katie and Jesse bring on Ethan Watters, an author and freelance journalist who helped debunk the recovered-memory craze back in the 1990s, to discuss the most recent development in that area: an article in The Cut that Watters does not think does a good and accurate job relating the (scant) scientific evidence for recovered memories. The hosts and Watters also discuss certain arguable therapeutic parallels between the recovered-memory movement and treatment for youth gender dysphoria, as well as the general tendency of liberals to violate their "We
Writer Ethan Watters joins Marcia Franklin to discuss the themes in his book, Urban Tribes, which looks at the ways in which young, unmarried Americans create their own sense of family. Ethan Watters has written about psychiatry and social psychology for 20 years. He has also taught writing at Berkeley, Stanford, and California College of the Arts. In 1994 he co-founded the San Francisco Writers' Grotto. In addition to several books, he's written about social trends for publications from Esquire to the New York Times Magazine, among other national and regional publications. He has also created pieces for Public Radio International's This American Life. Don’t forget to subscribe to the podcast and visit the Dialogue website for more conversations that matter! Originally Aired: 12/18/2008 The interview is part of Dialogue’s series, "Conversations from the Sun Valley Writers' Conference," and was taped at the 2008 conference. Since 1995, the conference has been bringing together some of the world’s most well-known and illuminating authors to discuss literature and life.
Pour cette troisième émission du TF Podcast, nous allons aborder les bases du validisme, et une partie bien spécifique du validisme : la psychophobie. Quelles sont les définitions de ces deux termes ? Qu’est-ce que cela recoupe ? Quelle est l’histoire occidentale de la psychiatrie ? Quels sont les bons comportements à adopter en tant que personne alliée ? Retranscription écrite de l'épisode : https://ia601508.us.archive.org/2/items/TheFeministePodcast/TF3%20-%20Conversation.pdf CW – TW : L’ensemble de l’émission a un TW validisme et psychophobie. Voici des CW et TW plus précis : Mention d’électrochocs : 11’25 à 11’33 Mention de chambre d’isolement – Fort Boyard : 11’30 à 11’52 Expressions : « c’est fou », « t’es folle », « il est schizophrène », « j’hallucine », « c’est hallucinant » : 12’30 à 12’44 Mention de meurtre : 13’29 à 13’33 Mention de propos psychophobe : 14’24 à 15’48 Mention de ciscentrisme : 18’16 à 19’25 Mention de mégenrage : 18’28 à 18’48 Mention de psychiatrisation des personnes queer : 21’28 à 22’23 Mention de psychiatrisation des personnes racisées : 22’56 à 23’15 Mention d’insultes psychophobes : 32’07 à 32’21 RESSOURCES DE L’EMISSION – Pour aller plus loin Ouvrages : Liste d’ouvrages sur le validisme (et la grossophobie) – Site Roseaux.co - http://roseaux.co/2018/03/nos-conseils-de-livres-militants-4-5/?fbclid=IwAR3LTY2xTJMs-KzfzjMSqPcsNV0aIPEZvmi5NuDI5XoaD3hFn-5a9hqz7jY « L’intranquille » - Gérard Garouste et Judith Perrignon - https://www.babelio.com/livres/Garouste-Lintranquille/130971?fbclid=IwAR0aOm8lSMbLPW6qG7LTbe1FpvNWM6LpecnmKZ4BLIqMy2eCiDuezLKf5Bk « Qui suis-je quand je ne suis pas moi ? » - Agathe Lenoël - https://www.babelio.com/livres/Lenol-Qui-suis-je-quand-je-ne-suis-pas-moi-Une-bipolai/786252?fbclid=IwAR0Ri151v7AICvHPDL2zw_stHCUBfFeLC81hWCZAJaoTyacSnK1N4Tn5b-4 « Vivre avec des hauts et des bas » - Christian Gay - https://www.babelio.com/livres/Gay-Vivre-avec-des-hauts-et-des-bas--Un-psy-et-un-pat/304987?fbclid=IwAR3fFGuFwdAqfsITemyibf1Zu9cBzeprUb4NhxEOrqDnU7CRSlCf8TVGZOA Articles : « Psychophobie » - Wikipédia - https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychophobie?fbclid=IwAR3e1nsxeP8tTVVtq8rNVSG_Mxmk9w5Z2REkNKy-p7D_a56nhXMpFCpMq1Q Site de La Mad Pride - https://lamadpride.fr/?fbclid=IwAR16D4V6aZYuyVQYaGPbMRfL1roR1NkWV2ZoXkhneMuajsiyGFT1bBigOp0 Site de Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/a-propos/?fbclid=IwAR2MY1736iIBiI4TiVBQ0jEjd_Nojf2OAaor2OLd6vA-V4KpDO_g_kYK7Z8 « La bipolarité, cette maladie qu’on croit connaître » - Perséphone pour Simonae.fr - https://simonae.fr/temoignages/bipolarite/?fbclid=IwAR2f5JBOs9QNOylooBoKFBRFAvT_wSGfuCAl8cj5fZ2UVLAGmTJ9u5s6mqw « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : le vocabulaire » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-1-le-vocabulaire/?fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : le respect de nos choix de vie » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-2-le-respect-de-nos-choix-de-vie/?fbclid=IwAR1MpPfmKbTVvsuAP4FFKk3wA9i5in9ysiQlP-sH-trkKq-T8uoK65ol8vI « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : inspiration, fétichisation, exotisation, caution, confusions… » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-3-inspiration-fetichisation-exotisation-caution-confusions/?fbclid=IwAR0aSOtvp6Ba3CUYnoAkP9zU4V3lv3DrqejajikOTIuI86NyrthIAdCSpjo « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : l’espace public et social » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-4-lespace-public-et-social/?fbclid=IwAR26_pzGJX_EN0A539cTdi8N9S1Jtte_O1e2lknzwkKGGFaOB6yxky9EPXU « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : tout le reste » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/25/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-5-tout-le-reste/?fbclid=IwAR0SlZJAChP6TSeHI0orzd2r5bBhxICRfEy5hRm5gBt8DEaiCPvop7id_nU « Le langage de la souffrance : santé mentale et invisibilité des femmes Noires » - Guilaine Kinouani - http://www.zinzinzine.net/le-langage-de-la-souffrance-sante-mentale-et-invisibilite-des-femmes-noires.html?fbclid=IwAR3H28eCANwi4u-bt1-DU1fGKxh0ZwUuz1TUrB5jhHW0i6PuAagilrD2iSM « « Race » et discrimination en matière de santé mentale en Occident » - Jayasree Kalathil - http://www.zinzinzine.net/discrimination-race-et-sante-mentale.html?fbclid=IwAR0Ri151v7AICvHPDL2zw_stHCUBfFeLC81hWCZAJaoTyacSnK1N4Tn5b-4 « Comment l’homme noir est devenu schizophrène, la psychiatrie, le DSM, et le mouvement Black Power » - Karen Franklin - http://www.zinzinzine.net/comment-homme-noir-est-devenu-schizophrene.html?fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk « Comment l’Occident exporte ses troubles mentaux » - Ethan Watters - http://www.zinzinzine.net/2016/09/comment-l-occident-exporte-ses-troubles-mentaux.html?fbclid=IwAR1GGup5Mu-m_V2UbYf715daMa8o6PX8hLHvZkJQce9ZtCnialr27pkngwI « La racialisation de la maladie mentale » - Arturo Baiocchi - http://www.zinzinzine.net/2016/05/la-racialisation-de-la-maladie-mentale.html?fbclid=IwAR2mWsenbvD0Vwa9sOEFT_MEMmGUdQdde3PqTZnRoBoXlQiEaxBX4ClI0_w Psycom - http://m.psycom.org/?fbclid=IwAR3du1bVDb_SO7rWf3WDJIwKUNolJS7bQa0tP5vCGg0DCSRz4D6HhBTvBfo « My anxiety makes me think everyone is going to leave me » - Kirsten Corley pour The Mighty - https://themighty.com/2017/05/anxiety-everyone-is-going-to-leave-me/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Mighty_Page&fbclid=IwAR0Jpi1YobcidcNF1PluQC83U0r67eGXPYWWO9UwKQljU6o7mjjy50hm6Os « What nobody tells you about selfcare » - Mawiyah Patten pour The Mighty - https://themighty.com/2016/09/self-care-how-to-take-care-of-yourself-when-you-have-depression/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=NP&utm_campaign=DoSomething&fbclid=IwAR1FRkigRteOOfJP6rdrVJLjpTMg7OEf5-CRAqmbQXZwvvfXZJgr0SGMHL4 « Silencing, trauma and whiteness » - Guilaine Kinouani - https://racereflections.co.uk/2018/03/26/silencing-trauma-and-whiteness/?fbclid=IwAR28nn35PRaUbETjrjSN1vH_bEbZbzZlHOpIhgaQzO8lvkmp6RKDEDLAaR4 « Trauma informed care & people of colour » - Guilaine Kinouani - https://racereflections.co.uk/2017/10/15/trauma-informed-self-care-and-racism/?fbclid=IwAR3fg7vVD9_aURudZILcc7tSqO2mtzSuNBooO8IiVAvJ5RosxbImuG9Aj00 « Culturally biased therapy? (Part 1) epistemic violence and CBT » - Guilaine Kinouani - https://racereflections.co.uk/2017/01/11/culturally-biased-therapy-epistemic-violence-and-cbt/?fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk « Culturally biased therapy? (Part 2) epistemic violence and CBT » - Guilaine Kinouani - https://racereflections.co.uk/2017/07/01/culturally-biased-therapy-part-2-injustice-and-depression/?fbclid=IwAR3aziHf8DW1ABf6-LbypAUbJscmhWE2gCY9GUdlfFl_HhH4rddKEut6Kt8 Liste d’articles sur la psychiatrie et le racisme (en anglais) – Race Reflections - https://racereflections.co.uk/resources/?fbclid=IwAR0aSOtvp6Ba3CUYnoAkP9zU4V3lv3DrqejajikOTIuI86NyrthIAdCSpjo « « Surviving race », lutter à l’intersection de la race et du handicap » - Surviving Race - http://www.zinzinzine.net/surviving-race-lutter-intersection-race-et-handicap.html?fbclid=IwAR2sei68IvRL_pJ91hweZadniuj_P7sSL7YhwPl4kw866nzEz0-WTFcGakY Emissions – Podcasts : « La psychophobie » Chaine Youtube de Colinette X - CW : mention agression sexuelle à 3 min 09 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PlqSn6Zu1fc&fbclid=IwAR1HiNB4CMkqG6PLkrSDibbxWKiEcz28BAf5P6R3TcwJXmfoIVAZz7TpKgQ « Un cookie ? – Les violeurs sont tous des malades mentaux » - Chaine Youtube de Ginger Force - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=za-O9cVjVEY&fbclid=IwAR3aziHf8DW1ABf6-LbypAUbJscmhWE2gCY9GUdlfFl_HhH4rddKEut6Kt8 « Touche pas à ma folie » - Chaine Youtube de SOS Psychophobie - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhBR4iwal6M&fbclid=IwAR26_pzGJX_EN0A539cTdi8N9S1Jtte_O1e2lknzwkKGGFaOB6yxky9EPXU « La contention n’est pas un jeu » - Chaine Youtube de SOS Psychophobie - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jU-vllTxhSI&fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk Chaine Youtube de Le PsyLab - https://www.youtube.com/user/lepsylab?fbclid=IwAR1HiNB4CMkqG6PLkrSDibbxWKiEcz28BAf5P6R3TcwJXmfoIVAZz7TpKgQ « 6 bullshits sur la dépression » - Chaine Youtube de Le PsyLab - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMNXqj3QmxU&feature=share « Borderline Personality Disorder is BAD? » - Chaine Youtube de Kati Morton - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FO_n9c1cBng&fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk « Please stop « pill shaming » people who take medication for mental health » - The Mighty - https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=2024942511107790 Enregistrement : mars 2019 Pour nous suivre sur les réseaux sociaux :Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/LeTFPodcast/Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/tf_podcast/Twitter : https://twitter.com/TF_podcastPour partager vos expériences ou nous envoyer des mots doux : thefeministe.podcast@gmail.com Logo par Chatzkim
Pour cette troisième émission du TF Podcast, nous allons aborder les bases du validisme, et une partie bien spécifique du validisme : la psychophobie. Quelles sont les définitions de ces deux termes ? Qu’est-ce que cela recoupe ? Quelle est l’histoire occidentale de la psychiatrie ? Quels sont les bons comportements à adopter en tant que personne alliée ? Retranscription écrite de l'épisode : https://ia601508.us.archive.org/2/items/TheFeministePodcast/TF3%20-%20Conversation.pdf CW – TW : L’ensemble de l’émission a un TW validisme et psychophobie. Voici des CW et TW plus précis : Mention d’électrochocs : 11’25 à 11’33 Mention de chambre d’isolement – Fort Boyard : 11’30 à 11’52 Expressions : « c’est fou », « t’es folle », « il est schizophrène », « j’hallucine », « c’est hallucinant » : 12’30 à 12’44 Mention de meurtre : 13’29 à 13’33 Mention de propos psychophobe : 14’24 à 15’48 Mention de ciscentrisme : 18’16 à 19’25 Mention de mégenrage : 18’28 à 18’48 Mention de psychiatrisation des personnes queer : 21’28 à 22’23 Mention de psychiatrisation des personnes racisées : 22’56 à 23’15 Mention d’insultes psychophobes : 32’07 à 32’21 RESSOURCES DE L’EMISSION – Pour aller plus loin Ouvrages : Liste d’ouvrages sur le validisme (et la grossophobie) – Site Roseaux.co - http://roseaux.co/2018/03/nos-conseils-de-livres-militants-4-5/?fbclid=IwAR3LTY2xTJMs-KzfzjMSqPcsNV0aIPEZvmi5NuDI5XoaD3hFn-5a9hqz7jY « L’intranquille » - Gérard Garouste et Judith Perrignon - https://www.babelio.com/livres/Garouste-Lintranquille/130971?fbclid=IwAR0aOm8lSMbLPW6qG7LTbe1FpvNWM6LpecnmKZ4BLIqMy2eCiDuezLKf5Bk « Qui suis-je quand je ne suis pas moi ? » - Agathe Lenoël - https://www.babelio.com/livres/Lenol-Qui-suis-je-quand-je-ne-suis-pas-moi-Une-bipolai/786252?fbclid=IwAR0Ri151v7AICvHPDL2zw_stHCUBfFeLC81hWCZAJaoTyacSnK1N4Tn5b-4 « Vivre avec des hauts et des bas » - Christian Gay - https://www.babelio.com/livres/Gay-Vivre-avec-des-hauts-et-des-bas--Un-psy-et-un-pat/304987?fbclid=IwAR3fFGuFwdAqfsITemyibf1Zu9cBzeprUb4NhxEOrqDnU7CRSlCf8TVGZOA Articles : « Psychophobie » - Wikipédia - https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychophobie?fbclid=IwAR3e1nsxeP8tTVVtq8rNVSG_Mxmk9w5Z2REkNKy-p7D_a56nhXMpFCpMq1Q Site de La Mad Pride - https://lamadpride.fr/?fbclid=IwAR16D4V6aZYuyVQYaGPbMRfL1roR1NkWV2ZoXkhneMuajsiyGFT1bBigOp0 Site de Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/a-propos/?fbclid=IwAR2MY1736iIBiI4TiVBQ0jEjd_Nojf2OAaor2OLd6vA-V4KpDO_g_kYK7Z8 « La bipolarité, cette maladie qu’on croit connaître » - Perséphone pour Simonae.fr - https://simonae.fr/temoignages/bipolarite/?fbclid=IwAR2f5JBOs9QNOylooBoKFBRFAvT_wSGfuCAl8cj5fZ2UVLAGmTJ9u5s6mqw « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : le vocabulaire » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-1-le-vocabulaire/?fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : le respect de nos choix de vie » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-2-le-respect-de-nos-choix-de-vie/?fbclid=IwAR1MpPfmKbTVvsuAP4FFKk3wA9i5in9ysiQlP-sH-trkKq-T8uoK65ol8vI « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : inspiration, fétichisation, exotisation, caution, confusions… » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-3-inspiration-fetichisation-exotisation-caution-confusions/?fbclid=IwAR0aSOtvp6Ba3CUYnoAkP9zU4V3lv3DrqejajikOTIuI86NyrthIAdCSpjo « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : l’espace public et social » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-4-lespace-public-et-social/?fbclid=IwAR26_pzGJX_EN0A539cTdi8N9S1Jtte_O1e2lknzwkKGGFaOB6yxky9EPXU « Cours de décence à l’usage des personnes neurotypiques : tout le reste » - Troll de Jardin - https://trolldejardin.wordpress.com/2017/09/25/cours-de-decence-a-lusage-des-personnes-neurotypiques-5-tout-le-reste/?fbclid=IwAR0SlZJAChP6TSeHI0orzd2r5bBhxICRfEy5hRm5gBt8DEaiCPvop7id_nU « Le langage de la souffrance : santé mentale et invisibilité des femmes Noires » - Guilaine Kinouani - http://www.zinzinzine.net/le-langage-de-la-souffrance-sante-mentale-et-invisibilite-des-femmes-noires.html?fbclid=IwAR3H28eCANwi4u-bt1-DU1fGKxh0ZwUuz1TUrB5jhHW0i6PuAagilrD2iSM « « Race » et discrimination en matière de santé mentale en Occident » - Jayasree Kalathil - http://www.zinzinzine.net/discrimination-race-et-sante-mentale.html?fbclid=IwAR0Ri151v7AICvHPDL2zw_stHCUBfFeLC81hWCZAJaoTyacSnK1N4Tn5b-4 « Comment l’homme noir est devenu schizophrène, la psychiatrie, le DSM, et le mouvement Black Power » - Karen Franklin - http://www.zinzinzine.net/comment-homme-noir-est-devenu-schizophrene.html?fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk « Comment l’Occident exporte ses troubles mentaux » - Ethan Watters - http://www.zinzinzine.net/2016/09/comment-l-occident-exporte-ses-troubles-mentaux.html?fbclid=IwAR1GGup5Mu-m_V2UbYf715daMa8o6PX8hLHvZkJQce9ZtCnialr27pkngwI « La racialisation de la maladie mentale » - Arturo Baiocchi - http://www.zinzinzine.net/2016/05/la-racialisation-de-la-maladie-mentale.html?fbclid=IwAR2mWsenbvD0Vwa9sOEFT_MEMmGUdQdde3PqTZnRoBoXlQiEaxBX4ClI0_w Psycom - http://m.psycom.org/?fbclid=IwAR3du1bVDb_SO7rWf3WDJIwKUNolJS7bQa0tP5vCGg0DCSRz4D6HhBTvBfo « My anxiety makes me think everyone is going to leave me » - Kirsten Corley pour The Mighty - https://themighty.com/2017/05/anxiety-everyone-is-going-to-leave-me/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Mighty_Page&fbclid=IwAR0Jpi1YobcidcNF1PluQC83U0r67eGXPYWWO9UwKQljU6o7mjjy50hm6Os « What nobody tells you about selfcare » - Mawiyah Patten pour The Mighty - https://themighty.com/2016/09/self-care-how-to-take-care-of-yourself-when-you-have-depression/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=NP&utm_campaign=DoSomething&fbclid=IwAR1FRkigRteOOfJP6rdrVJLjpTMg7OEf5-CRAqmbQXZwvvfXZJgr0SGMHL4 « Silencing, trauma and whiteness » - Guilaine Kinouani - https://racereflections.co.uk/2018/03/26/silencing-trauma-and-whiteness/?fbclid=IwAR28nn35PRaUbETjrjSN1vH_bEbZbzZlHOpIhgaQzO8lvkmp6RKDEDLAaR4 « Trauma informed care & people of colour » - Guilaine Kinouani - https://racereflections.co.uk/2017/10/15/trauma-informed-self-care-and-racism/?fbclid=IwAR3fg7vVD9_aURudZILcc7tSqO2mtzSuNBooO8IiVAvJ5RosxbImuG9Aj00 « Culturally biased therapy? (Part 1) epistemic violence and CBT » - Guilaine Kinouani - https://racereflections.co.uk/2017/01/11/culturally-biased-therapy-epistemic-violence-and-cbt/?fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk « Culturally biased therapy? (Part 2) epistemic violence and CBT » - Guilaine Kinouani - https://racereflections.co.uk/2017/07/01/culturally-biased-therapy-part-2-injustice-and-depression/?fbclid=IwAR3aziHf8DW1ABf6-LbypAUbJscmhWE2gCY9GUdlfFl_HhH4rddKEut6Kt8 Liste d’articles sur la psychiatrie et le racisme (en anglais) – Race Reflections - https://racereflections.co.uk/resources/?fbclid=IwAR0aSOtvp6Ba3CUYnoAkP9zU4V3lv3DrqejajikOTIuI86NyrthIAdCSpjo « « Surviving race », lutter à l’intersection de la race et du handicap » - Surviving Race - http://www.zinzinzine.net/surviving-race-lutter-intersection-race-et-handicap.html?fbclid=IwAR2sei68IvRL_pJ91hweZadniuj_P7sSL7YhwPl4kw866nzEz0-WTFcGakY Emissions – Podcasts : « La psychophobie » Chaine Youtube de Colinette X - CW : mention agression sexuelle à 3 min 09 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PlqSn6Zu1fc&fbclid=IwAR1HiNB4CMkqG6PLkrSDibbxWKiEcz28BAf5P6R3TcwJXmfoIVAZz7TpKgQ « Un cookie ? – Les violeurs sont tous des malades mentaux » - Chaine Youtube de Ginger Force - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=za-O9cVjVEY&fbclid=IwAR3aziHf8DW1ABf6-LbypAUbJscmhWE2gCY9GUdlfFl_HhH4rddKEut6Kt8 « Touche pas à ma folie » - Chaine Youtube de SOS Psychophobie - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhBR4iwal6M&fbclid=IwAR26_pzGJX_EN0A539cTdi8N9S1Jtte_O1e2lknzwkKGGFaOB6yxky9EPXU « La contention n’est pas un jeu » - Chaine Youtube de SOS Psychophobie - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jU-vllTxhSI&fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk Chaine Youtube de Le PsyLab - https://www.youtube.com/user/lepsylab?fbclid=IwAR1HiNB4CMkqG6PLkrSDibbxWKiEcz28BAf5P6R3TcwJXmfoIVAZz7TpKgQ « 6 bullshits sur la dépression » - Chaine Youtube de Le PsyLab - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMNXqj3QmxU&feature=share « Borderline Personality Disorder is BAD? » - Chaine Youtube de Kati Morton - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FO_n9c1cBng&fbclid=IwAR2yFsgf_N8pdHcC6KjvwWJMHQXPhdNlj3AGc88uFKa1xdeWmbvMexIDtpk « Please stop « pill shaming » people who take medication for mental health » - The Mighty - https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=2024942511107790 Enregistrement : mars 2019 Pour nous suivre sur les réseaux sociaux :Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/LeTFPodcast/Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/tf_podcast/Twitter : https://twitter.com/TF_podcastPour partager vos expériences ou nous envoyer des mots doux : thefeministe.podcast@gmail.com Logo par Chatzkim
Dag har fortsatt influensa by proxy og mister stadig livslyst. Heldigvis er både Gunnar og psykolog Ole Jacob Madsen tilstede i studio for å prate om generasjon prestasjon. Dagens ungdom er flinke, men har de det bedre? Sosiale medier, skole og kjønn er alle faktorer som påvirker unges psykiske helse, men hva er forskjellen på psykiske plager og psykiske lidelser? Ingen leser bøker lenger, man må ha god råd for å gi faen, og barnehagebarn sjekker mail. I en tid der man lever livet via internett blir man kanskje mer lykkelig av å trekke seg tilbake? Artikler:-https://psykologisk.no/2018/11/hvor-gikk-det-galt-for-generasjon-prestasjon/-www.psykologforeningen.no/foreningen/nyheter-og-kommentarer/aktuelt/i-strupen-paa-selvhjelpskulturen-www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/09/has-the-smartphone-destroyed-a-generation/534198/ NERVE med Tone podcast-Episode med Dag: https://youtu.be/G5N9ATpHY-E-Episode med Gunnar: https://youtu.be/o09QGIInUlU Bokanbefalinger:-Generasjon Prestasjon, Ole Jacob Madsen-Det er innover vi må gå, Ole Jacob Madsen-iGen, Jean M. Twenge-Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche, Ethan Watters-Hunting Humans: The Rise of the Modern Multiple Murderer, Elliott Leyton
Welcome to Our Food Journey: a podcast by Hormel Foods.We feature conversations with people who are making a difference in how we create and think about food. From Midwestern farmers, to food entrepreneurs, and from Master Chefs, to parents preparing dinner for their families. We're all players in an interconnected food system and we all deserve a place at the table. In this introductory episode of our food journey, show hosts Certified Master Chef Ron DeSantis and journalist Ethan Watters discuss why, in these times of globalization and concerns over the sustainability of our natural resources, food has become an increasingly important topic.
Critical psychiatrist joins us to explore the history and development of psychiatric medication, why there is little, if any, evidence to support the idea that psychiatric medication is correcting a “chemical imbalance” or any other underlying cause of mental illness, why the disease-centred model of mental health issues is both misleading and disempowering to service users, and ultimately, why much of the “science” supporting psychiatric medication is based more on ideology than evidence. *** PATREON *** https://patreon.com/myownworstenemy *** BOOKS MENTIONED *** "The Myth of the Chemical Cure" by Joanna Moncrieff https://amzn.to/2MxG5po "A Straight Talking Guide to Psychiatric Drugs" by Joanna Moncrieff https://amzn.to/2nlq6j9 "The Bitterest Pills" by Joanna Moncrieff https://amzn.to/2vwpgob "A Woman in Berlin" by Anonymous https://amzn.to/2Miosgc "Das Kapital (Capital Vol. 1)" by Karl Marx https://amzn.to/2KL9cnv "Manufacturing Depression" by Gary Greenberg https://amzn.to/2MiOTCt "Crazy Like Us" by Ethan Watters https://amzn.to/2MBZLZ6 *** SOCIAL MEDIA *** Facebook: http://facebook.com/myownworstenemyorg Twitter: http://twitter.com/dannydwhittaker *** CREDITS *** Theme Music: Falling Down by Ryan Little http://youtube.com/user/TheR4C2010 Podcast Image: IGypsyWoman https://flic.kr/p/NtCRK3 DISCLAIMER: My Own Worst Enemy is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk and affiliated sites.
During World War II, the U.S. Army experimented with a bizarre plan: using live bats to firebomb Japanese cities. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll describe the crazy history of the bat bomb, the extraordinary brainchild of a Pennsylvania dentist. We'll also consider the malleable nature of mental illness and puzzle over an expensive quiz question. Intro: Ever since George Washington, American presidents have hated the job. Harpsichordist Johann Schobert composed a series of "puzzle minuets" that could be read upside down. Sources for our feature on the bat bomb: Jack Couffer, Bat Bomb, 1992. James M. Powles, "Lytle S. Adams Proposed One of America's Battiest Weapons," World War II 17:2 (July 2002), 62. Robert M. Neer, "Bats Out of Hell," MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History 25:4 (Summer 2013), 22-24. C.V. Glines, "Bat & Bird Bombers," Aviation History 15:5 (May 2005), 38-44. Stephan Wilkinson, "10 of History's Worst Weapons," Military History 31:1 (May 2014), 42-45. "Holy Smokes, Batman!" Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 49:2 (March 1993), 5. Alexis C. Madrigal, "Old, Weird Tech: The Bat Bombs of World War II," Atlantic, April 14, 2011. Toni Kiser, "Bat Bomb Tests Go Awry," National WWII Museum, May 15, 2013. Joanne Grant, "Did They Have Bats in the Belfry? WWII Team Created Novel Bomb to Defeat Japan," [Bergen County, N.J.] Record, Oct. 27, 1996, A31. "Air Force Scrapped Top Secret 'Bat Bomb' Project in Carlsbad 70 Years Ago," Carlsbad [N.M.] Current-Argus, May 26, 2014. Curt Suplee, "Shot Down Before It Could Fly," Washington Post, Nov. 16, 1992, D01. T. Rajagopalan, "Birds and Animals in War and Peace," Alive 401 (March 2016), 92-93. Cara Giaimo, "The Almost Perfect World War II Plot To Bomb Japan With Bats," Atlas Obscura, Aug. 5, 2015. The total loss due to the Carlsbad fire was $6,838, nearly $100,000 today, and the cause was listed as "explosion of incendiary bomb materials." Base fire marshal George S. Young wrote to the base commander: "In-as-much as the work being done under Lt. Col. Epler was of a confidential nature, and everyone connected with this base had been denied admission, it is impossible for me to determine the exact cause of the fire, but my deduction is that an explosion of incendiary bomb material cause the fire." Listener mail: Ethan Watters, "The Americanization of Mental Illness," New York Times Magazine, Jan. 8, 2010. Neel Burton, "The Culture of Mental Illness," Psychology Today, June 6, 2012. J.J. Mattelaer and W. Jilek, "Koro -- The Psychological Disappearance of the Penis," Journal of Sexual Medicine 4:5 (September 2007), 1509-1515. Steven Johnson, Wonderland: How Play Shaped the Modern World, 2016. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Alexander Rodgers. Here are three corroborating links (warning -- these spoil the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on iTunes or Google Play Music or via the RSS feed at http://feedpress.me/futilitycloset. This episode is supported by Dittach, a Chrome extension to browse, search, or manage your Gmail attachments. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- on our Patreon page you can pledge any amount per episode, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!
Namaste Yoga Revealed Podcast Community! This is Alec Rouben, your Boulder Colorado Lovin’ Host! WOW! We are nearly at 100K Downloads and Subscribers! THANK YOU for being apart of this truly devoted and dedicated community! Today we have the pleasure of introducing Chelsea Roff, Founder of EAT BREATHE THRIVE. EAT BREATHE THRIVE is all about illuminating eating disorders and harnessing the power of yoga to absolve body image and the harmful eating disorders that come along with it. Eat Breathe Thrive is a non-profit organization that prevents and helps individuals fully recover from disordered eating and negative body image through evidence-based programs that integrate yoga, community and service. Chelsea spent much of her life plagued by the torment of her own body and mind; until she began to make substantial changes. This for her was the start of her Yoga Practice. If you have ever struggled with body image or know someone who has, this is an powerful episode to drop in with. Learn how Chelsea overcame this huge restriction in her life using yoga and how she made quantum leaps in creating a world-wide community! Enjoy this episode of the Yoga Revealed Podcast! You can find ANY of her trainings across the country - and through specific countries around the globe! Go to http://www.eatbreathethrive.org/upcoming-trainings.html Chelsea’s Top 3 Books Suggestions: 1. Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche, by Ethan Watters 2. The Good Body, by Eve Ensler 3. Stranger in a Strange Land, by Robert Heinlein Visit www.Yogarevealed.com to subsribe to our growing NEWSLETTER list! Exciting things are coming up to share with you! Until next time, Peace, love, and daily practice! Alec Rouben See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
“I mean I don't see a halo on you, even though I see a couple of horns. See that little angel and that little devil on the side? Yeah. You're you.” -Serafin Jose Saavedra This story, the Story of Me, probably won’t have a proper ending, like the kind that is comforting and reminds you that all is well in the world. It shouldn’t. Because that’s false and I’m not dead yet. More than a month ago, the first part of this prologue aired with the intent of framing up this larger podcast project: a show about stories and the foolish pursuit of life, clarity and context. Family members, peers, friends and foes, from high school days to those that I work with were all interviewed. Rather, this prologue wraps up with the outside perspective. What do strangers think of me? If you’re six-years-old and reading this, don’t try this at home. You shouldn’t be talking to strangers. And then, the context. Was this project, a selfie in podcast form (possible Upworthy headline?), insightful? Did it provide any context about who I am? Granted, it’s just the prologue, but it’s Some Noise. Show Notes: [00:35] “They Reminisce Over You” cover by Quantic [03:05] On Frodo and the Giant Eagles [Periannath.com, 2009] [03:10] America’s Most Expensive City [Zumper, 2015] [11:45] “93 ‘til Infinity” cover by Zifhang [17:55] “Google Google Apps Apps” by Persia [21:50] “O Yana Donder Beni” by Selda Bagcan [MiddleEastEye.net, 2015] [27:30] “This Too Shall Pass” by Andre Paola Juan Urban Tribes [30:40] Ethan Watters (@ethanwatters1)
About: Who do you think you are? It’s not an easy question to answer. It shouldn’t be. But I’ve tried to get the bottom of it by starting at the top. To introduce this podcast project—Some Noise—the foolish pursuit of life, clarity and context—I’ve decided to report on the story of me. But why? If this is going to be a show about other people, their lives and purpose, then I think it’s only fair it start with, well, me. Who am I? Where do I come from? What are my values? And where do they come from? I’ve interviewed family, friends, foes and strangers over the past year and asked them the very basic question—”Who am I?” It’s a four part series about me, according to others, broken up into family, the school years, work life and the outside perspective. Show Notes: 1. [00:45] “This Too Shall Pass” by Andre Paola Juan 2. [01:35] Bryan Hasho (@bryanhasho) 3. [03:10] Plato’s Allegory of the Cave explained 4. [04:25] Ethan Watters (@ethanwatters1) 5. [04:40] Urban Tribes 6. [10:00] “Valley” performed by Quraishi 7. More about Quraishi (The Wall Street Journal, 2014) 8. [13:00] More on Afghan Tribes (National Geographic, 2003) 9. Recommended reading on Afghanistan’s early history 10. [19:05] “Ai Ham Watan” by Ahmad Zahir (NPR, 2010) 11. [26:15] “Maida Maida” by Ehsan Aman (Los Angeles Times, 2001) 12. [37:45] “Saqi Na De” by Nashenas (The New York Times, 1992)
In the Middle Ages, people married, had children, went off to war and took on all the traditional trappings of adulthood by their early teens. But today many people put off those trappings until well into their thirties. Some have even suggested that we need a new vocabulary to describe the variety of life stages experienced by 21st century humans. John and Ken explore the new adulthood with Ethan Watters, author of "Urban Tribes: A Generation Redefines Friendship, Family, and Commitment." More at: http://philosophytalk.org/shows/what-adult
More at: http://philosophytalk.org/shows/mental-illness-and-culture. Paranoia, depression, schizophrenia, bipolarity, and all the other ways Americans have discovered to be crazy – are they universal phenomena, rooted in human biology? Or are they cultural kinks, rooted in one society's peculiar pressures and institutions? Are Americans inducing the rest of the world to be crazy like us, so we can market the appropriate cures? Ken and John maintain their sanity with Ethan Watters, author of "Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche."
How did pharmaceutical giant Glaxo Smith Kline create "depression" in Japan -- and a billion dollar market for its anti-depressant drug Paxil? Why do people diagnosed with schizophrenia recover more in Tanzania than they do in the US? Can western-style psychotherapy help tsunami survivors in Sri Lanka? Ethan Watters, author of Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche, discusses how mental disorders are cultural products, defined in the US and then exported around the world. [Read more...]
Today we're bringing you conversations with a quartet of authors we've had the pleasure of speaking with over the past few months. They include - Ethan Watters, author of Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche, Jeremy Rifkin, the president of the Foundation on Economic Trends whose most recent book is The Empathic Civilization : The Race to Global Consciousness in a World in Crisis, CAPT Shannon Meehan, author of Beyond Duty: Life on the Frontline in Iraq written with Roger Thompson, and Hugh Ambrose who has written The Pacific, a companion book to the ongoing HBO miniseries. Tune in!