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  • Problematizing the neurochemical subject of anti-depressant treatment: The limits of biomedical responses to women’s emotional distress

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    Author(s)
    Fullagar, Simone
    O'Brien, Wendy
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Fullagar, Simone P.
    Year published
    2013
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    Abstract
    In this article we situate empirical research into women's problematic experiences of anti-depressant medication within broader debates about pharmaceuticalization and the rise of the neurochemical self. We explore how women interpreted and problematized anti-depressant medication as it impeded their recovery in a number of ways. Drawing upon Foucauldian and feminist work we conceptualize anti-depressants as biotechnologies of the self that shaped how women thought about and acted upon their embodied (and hence gendered) subjectivities. Through the interplay of biochemical, emotional and socio-cultural effects medication ...
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    In this article we situate empirical research into women's problematic experiences of anti-depressant medication within broader debates about pharmaceuticalization and the rise of the neurochemical self. We explore how women interpreted and problematized anti-depressant medication as it impeded their recovery in a number of ways. Drawing upon Foucauldian and feminist work we conceptualize anti-depressants as biotechnologies of the self that shaped how women thought about and acted upon their embodied (and hence gendered) subjectivities. Through the interplay of biochemical, emotional and socio-cultural effects medication worked to shape women's self-inrecovery in ways that both reinscribed and undermined a neurochemical construction of depression. Our analysis outlines two key discursive constructions that focused on women's problematization of the neurochemical self in response to the side-effects of anti-depressant use. We identified how the failure of medication to alleviate depression contributed to women's reinterpretation of recovery as a process of 'working' on the emotional self. We argue that women's stories act as a form of subjugated knowledge about the material and discursive forces shaping depression and recovery. These findings offer a gendered critique of scientific and market orientated rationalities underpinning neurochemical recovery that obscure the embodied relations of affect and the social conditions that enable the self to change.
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    Journal Title
    Health: An interdisciplinary journal for the social study of health, illness and medicine
    Volume
    17
    Issue
    1
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1177/1363459312447255
    Funder(s)
    ARC
    Grant identifier(s)
    DP0556131
    Copyright Statement
    © 2012 SAGE Publications. This is the author-manuscript version of the paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.
    Subject
    Mental health services
    Sociology
    Sociology not elsewhere classified
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/47442
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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