Empire of Normality
$19.95
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
The neurodiversity movement suggests that society takes all kinds of minds to function. Instead of accepting their place as inferior, the divergent are reforging their position as ‘neurominorities,' and are organizing in ever greater numbers to change how they are perceived and treated. Robert Chapman looks at the history that led to this movement, showing how the rise of capitalism created an 'empire of normality' that transformed our understanding of the body into that of a productivity machine. Blowing apart this outdated and oppressive understanding of mental functioning, Chapman argues that a bright future for neurodivergent communities could be achieved by challenging the deepest logic of capitalism. Liberation from oppression is possible, but only if we can change the conditions that gave rise to pervasive neuronormative domination across the modern world.
This is the rise of the neurodiversity movement
Robert Chapman is a neurodivergent philosopher, writing on neurodiversity theory, madness and disability. They have taught at King’s College London, the University of Bristol and Sheffield Hallam where they are currently a Senior Lecturer in Education and Autism. They blog at Psychology Today and at Critical Neurodiversity.
Introduction
1. Capitalism and the Emergence of Normality
2. The Pathology Paradigm and Eugenics
3. The Myths of Anti-Psychiatry
4. Post-Fordism as Mass Disabling Event
5. The Neurodiversity Movement
6. Disablement without Normality
7. Towards a Democratic Theory of Mental Illness
Conclusion: Signposts towards a Way Out
1. Capitalism and the Emergence of Normality
2. The Pathology Paradigm and Eugenics
3. The Myths of Anti-Psychiatry
4. Post-Fordism as Mass Disabling Event
5. The Neurodiversity Movement
6. Disablement without Normality
7. Towards a Democratic Theory of Mental Illness
Conclusion: Signposts towards a Way Out
Additional information
Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |
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