Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health
Health & Fitness:Mental Health
Janice Haaken is a professor emeritus of psychology at Portland State University, a clinical psychologist, and a documentary filmmaker. In addition to her work as a professor at Portland State University, Haaken has taught as a Fulbright scholar at Durham University (UK) and University College Cork (Ireland) and as a visiting professor at London School of Economics (UK), York University (UK), and University of Michigan Ann Arbor.
Her documentaries, including Guilty Except for Insanity (2009), Mind Zone: Therapists Behind the Front Lines (2014), Milk Men: The Life and Times of Dairy Farmers (2016), and Our Bodies Our Doctors (2019), focus on people and places on the social margins, drawing out their insights on the world around them. Jan has received numerous awards for her filmmaking, most recently the Lena Sharpe Persistence of Vision award at the 2019 Seattle International Film Festival.
Haaken publishes extensively in psychoanalysis and feminism, the history and politics of diagnosis, trauma, culture, and memory, and the dynamics of storytelling. In addition to Pillar of Salt: Gender, Memory and the Perils of Looking Back(2000) and Hard Knocks: Psychology and the Dynamics of Storytelling (2010), her new book is called Psychiatry, Politics, and PTSD: Breaking Down (2021).
In this interview, she discusses her background in anti-psychiatry and other social movements and her experience liaising between theory and praxis in feminist movements, Occupy Wall Street, Black Lives Matter, and #MeToo. Weaving a history of how both radical and normative ideas and diagnoses in mental health play out in social movements, Jan draws upon her books and films to discuss how activists and mental health professionals alike can better reflect upon their practices and the role they play within larger social systems. We close by following her recent work, which unpacks the benefits and drawbacks of the PTSD diagnosis for personal narratives, collective memory-making, the US military, NGOs, and global mental health critics.
Trans Lifeline - Naming Trans-Specific Harm in Mental Health
Nicholas Haslam - Psych Concepts Creep Into Our Everyday Experiences
Allan Horwitz and Sarah Fay - The Impact the DSM Has Had On All of Us
Sera Davidow - Trusting People as Experts of Themselves
Lynne Layton - The Social Unconscious and Character Formation in Neoliberal Culture
Dana Becker - The Medicalization of Women’s Suffering
Michael Hengartner – Evidence-biased Antidepressant Prescription
Johann Hari: Stolen Focus – Why You Can’t Pay Attention
Elia Abi-Jaoude - Understanding the Youth Mental Health Crisis
Sebastienne Grant - Critical Psychology for a Better Society
For Life - Opera on Psychiatry and Its Drugs Premieres on Jan 15
Vincenzo Di Nicola - The Crisis in Psychiatry and The Slow Way Back
Oryx Cohen and Briza Gavidia - Emotional CPR - Heart-Centered Peer Support
Elisa Lacerda-Vandenborn - How Western Psychology Can Rip Indigenous Families Apart
Renee Schuls-Jacobson – Psychiatrized: Waking up After a Decade of Bad Medicine
Giovanni Fava - A Different Psychiatry is Possible
Hans Skott-Myhre - Can Critiques of Psychiatry Help us Imagine a Post-Capitalist Future?
Shira Collings - New Perspectives on Eating Disorders
Helena Hansen - Combatting Structural Racism and Classism in Psychiatry
Matcheri Keshavan and Raquelle Mesholam-Gately - Why Some Experts and Patients Want to Rename Schizophrenia
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