Psychotropic Drugs and Popular Culture - Essays on Medicine, Mental Health and the Media (Paperback)


Psychotropic drugs - those intended to change moods, numb anxiety, prop up sagging libidos or calm children - are pervasive in American culture. References are everywhere: not just in print and electronic advertisements, but in television show dialogue, movies, song lyrics, and on advertising paraphernalia like notepads, wall clocks, mouse pads, coffee mugs, pens and pencils. The authors in this compilation of essays on psychotropic drugs and mass culture contend that society has been transformed into a wall-less asylum - a ""psychotropia."" With each new definition of a mental ailment, a new cure is offered, increasing the number of inmates in this borderless asylum and blurring the lines between mental health and mental illness. Eight essays probe this issue, with an introduction and conclusion by the editor. The introduction frames the topic in the dehumanized asylums brought to light in 1961, by sociologist Erving Goffman, and in author Marshall McLuhan's warning not to be seduced by the media. The essay topics cover: how psychotropia came to be; drug portrayal in Hollywood; advertising in cyberspace and the postmodern condition; the advertising madness that promotes better living through chemistry; food as medicine; the music culture and psychotropia: children and psychotropic drugs; and stereotypes and manipulation in mass marketing.

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Product Description

Psychotropic drugs - those intended to change moods, numb anxiety, prop up sagging libidos or calm children - are pervasive in American culture. References are everywhere: not just in print and electronic advertisements, but in television show dialogue, movies, song lyrics, and on advertising paraphernalia like notepads, wall clocks, mouse pads, coffee mugs, pens and pencils. The authors in this compilation of essays on psychotropic drugs and mass culture contend that society has been transformed into a wall-less asylum - a ""psychotropia."" With each new definition of a mental ailment, a new cure is offered, increasing the number of inmates in this borderless asylum and blurring the lines between mental health and mental illness. Eight essays probe this issue, with an introduction and conclusion by the editor. The introduction frames the topic in the dehumanized asylums brought to light in 1961, by sociologist Erving Goffman, and in author Marshall McLuhan's warning not to be seduced by the media. The essay topics cover: how psychotropia came to be; drug portrayal in Hollywood; advertising in cyberspace and the postmodern condition; the advertising madness that promotes better living through chemistry; food as medicine; the music culture and psychotropia: children and psychotropic drugs; and stereotypes and manipulation in mass marketing.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

McFarland & Company

Country of origin

United States

Release date

May 2006

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

May 2006

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 154 x 13mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback

Pages

227

ISBN-13

978-0-7864-2513-6

Barcode

9780786425136

Categories

LSN

0-7864-2513-X



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