ABSTRACT

This book argues that while notions of trauma in mental health hold promise for the advancement of women’s rights, the mainstreaming of trauma treatments and therapies has had mixed implications, sometimes replacing genuine social change efforts with new forms of female oppression by psychiatry. It contends that trauma interventions often represent a "business as usual" approach within psychiatry, with women being expected to comply with rigid treatment protocols, accepting the advice given by trauma "experts" that they are mentally unstable and that they must learn to manage the effects of violence in the absence of any real changes to their circumstances or resources. A critique of trauma treatment in its current form, Trauma, Women’s Mental Health, and Social Justice recommends practical steps towards a socio-political perspective on trauma which passionately re-engages with feminist values and activist principles.

chapter 2|18 pages

Interrogating biomedical dominance

Critical and feminist perspectives on mental health

chapter 3|27 pages

The mainstreaming of trauma in mental health

Radical critique, or business as usual?

chapter 5|30 pages

Dysfunctional and responsible

Women’s accounts of therapeutic responses to gender-based violence

chapter 6|19 pages

De-therapising trauma

Negotiating the contested trauma concept