Bipolar Expeditions (59 page)

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Authors: Emily Martin

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Chen, Nancy

Chernow, Ron

Christianity/Protestantism; “feminized”

Churchill, Winston

Clifford, James

Clinton, Bill

Cobain, Kurt

Cohen, Randy

Comaroff, Jean

Comaroff, John

commensuration

Condorcet, Marquis de

conformity

Connor, Margaret

Consumer Confidence Index

Corrigan, John

corporations

“Cost of Lost Productive Work Time among U.S. Workers with Depression” (Eli Lily Company)

Cramer, James J.

Crapanzano, Vincent

“crazy”

creativity

crowds, and irrational behavior,

culture, and economics

Cytomel

 

daemon

“Dancing on the Edge: An Intimate Look at a Bipolar Life” display

Darwin, Charles

Das, Veena

Dash, Mike

Dean, Howard

dementia praecox

Denby, David; his obsession with becoming a millionaire

Depakote

depressio “depressive realism,” and “double bookkeeping,” and lack of motivatio and lack of productivity; as a “mood episode,” romanticizing of; and social withdrawal symptoms of

Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA)

Depression and Manic Depression Association (DMDA); patient control ofin California

Depression and Related Affective Disorders Association (DRADA)

Derrida, Jacques

Descartes, Rene
Detour
(Simon)

diagnosis: performative effect of “poor insight” and the diagnosis of mental illness retroactive and social reality

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(2nd ed. [DSM-II])

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(3rd ed. [DSM-III])

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(4th ed. [DSM-IV]) active role of in patients' lives; DSM categories DSM categories as “text-atoms,” and reimbursement for psychiatric care

disorientation

Donzelot, Jacques

dopamine

double awareness/“double bookkeeping.”
See
depression: and “double bookkeeping”

downsizing

dreams

Dror, Otniel

Drug S

drugs.
See
psychotropic drugs

Dumit, Joseph

Duncan, Isadora

Dynegy

dysthymia

 

Edison, Thomas

Effexor; advertising for

Ehrenberg, Alain

Elavil

elective affinity

electroencephalograph

Eliot, T. S.

emasculation

Emotional Contagion
(Hatfield, Cacioppo, and Rapson)

emotionsn “contagion” of Darwin's view of deadening of; emotional “coolness,” emotional expressions emotional flexibility and language and the law and the market and moods; and social interactions

entrepreneurs

Epstein, Steven

Espeland, Wendy Nelson

eudaemonia

Ewen, Stuart

Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds
(Tobias)
Exuberance
(Jamison)

 

factories, changes in hierarchical structure of

Falret, Jean Pierre

falungong

Farrell, Christopher

Feelings ofDepression

Fidler, Donald

Fieve, Ronald

Fingarette, Herbert

Flaxman, John

Fleck, Ludwig

Focalin

folie circulaire
(circular insanity)

Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Division of Drug Marketing, Advertising and Communication (DDMAC)

Foucault, Michel; on madness

Franklin, Benjamin

Freud, Sigmundn

Fuller, Jane

Future and Its Enemies, The
(Postrel)

 

Gaines, Atwood

Gal, Susan

Galen

Gartner, John

Gauguin, Paul

Geertz, Clifford

gender; and sexuality

genes

Gide, Andre

Gilder, George

Gilsenan, Michael

Ginzburg, Carlo

Giosa, Sam

Goodwin, Fred

Gordon, Avery

Graham, Benjamin

Grant, James

Gray, Spalding

Greek humoral system.
See also
manic depression, history of

Greenspan, Alan

Grieder, William

Grigoriadis, Vanessa

Grombrich, E. H.

Gusterson, Hugh

 

habitual actions/practices

Hacking, Ian

Hamilton, Alexander

Hanks, William

Harvard Bipolar Research Program

Harvey, David

Havens, Leston

health, differing conceptions of

Hearing Voices Network

Heart ofDarkness
(Conrad)

Hebdige, Dick

Heidegger, Martin

Heilman, John

Hemingway, Ernest

Hinshaw, Stephen

Hinshaw, Virgil

Ho, Karen

Holmes, Katherine

Hume, David

Huxley, Aldous

Hygeia

hypomania

relation of to the public personality of Americans

Hypomanic Edge: The Link Between (a Little) Craziness and (a Lot of) Success in America
(Gartner)

 

Icarus Project

Impure Science
(Epstein)

individuals, and markets; and continuous retraining and the illusion of time speeding up; as the norm; and personality development and psychological tests

interior states

insulin

insurance, health

Intention
(Anscombe)

“irrational exuberance”

Irrational Exuberance
(Schiller)

 

Jack, Bradley

Jackson, Pam

Jakobson, Roman

James, William

Jamison, Kay; on artists/musicians as “manic-depressive,” on manic depression and rational thought; personal phenomenological description of mood disorder; on resistance to taking lithium

Janssen Pharmaceutica.
See
“Virtual Hallucinations” display (Janssen Pharmaceutica)

Jaspers, Karl on depression

Jayson, Lawrence

jazz

Jeffords, Susan

Jobs, Steve

Jones, Allen

Josh: My Up and Down, In and Out Life
(Logan)

Judy Moody Mood Journal, The

 

Karp, David

Keynes, John Maynard

Kindleberger, Charles

Kingston, Anne

Klein, Melanie

Klonopin

Kraepelin, Emil; description of mania by; “manic-depressive insanity” theory of and mood charts; reclassification of manic disorders by

Kraus, Alfred

Kretschner, Ernst

Kulick, Don

Kurtz, Howard

 

Lakoff, George

Lamictal

Le Bon, Gustave

Leading Change
(Kotter)

Levy, Jack

Lexapro

Lincoln, Abraham

lithium carbonate; resistance of patients to taking it

Lithium-P “Lithium Sunset”

Live Crazy Network

Locke, John

Logan, Josh

Lutz, C.

Luhrmann, T. H.

Lunbeck, Elizabeth

Luvox

Lynch, Michael

 

MacFarquhar, Larissa

MadLib

madness, and the abyss/darkness of the irrational; changing conceptions of; definition of; ending of; intellectual view of

magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

Mahler, Gustav

Man in Full, A
(Wolfe)

Man of Jasmine, The
(Ziirn)

Manhattan

mania and the awareness of suffering; differing concepts of; increasing use of the term in the media and manic depressio as “manic style,” as a “mood episode,” painful cures for; reactions to in other cultures understanding of in context

mania, dramatic quality of.
See
performance: manic performances

Mania
(Jayson)

Manias, Panics, and Crashes
(Kindleberger)

manic behavior, example of group manic behavior; inducement of symptoms ofmanic episodes

manic depression, and the affinity with American culture as an asset; and celebrities; and the corporate workplace; and creativity; cultural practices concerning; and economic status; effect of on personhood; and the “eye flash” of recognitio and gender; and one's mental state as a “thing,” portrayal of in the national media; and race redefinition of; as a reversal of established order; screening for; self-monitoring of; understanding of in context.
See also
manic depression, history of; manic depression, living under the description of; moods; schizophrenia: bifurcation between schizophrenia and manic depression

manic depression, history of; early twentieth-century; Enlightenment beliefs concerning; and the “faulty psychology” theory; and the “first voice/second voice,” Greek and classical beliefs concerning; in late antiquity; late twentieth-century; and psychoanalytic theory; and the reclassification of manic disorders by Kraepelin

manic depression, living under the description of “colonization” of interaction of with other patients manic sociability as an extension of identity; mortality rate of reactions to by other people and sociality/conformity of

“Manic-Depression” (Chaffin)

“manic-depressive illness”

Manic-Depressive Insanity and Paranoia
(Kraepelin)

manic heroes; corporate heroes

Mann, Bill

Mann, Thomas

markets: excess emotion i gender role reversals in response to stock market crash (1857); mania in rationality of.
See also
individuals, and markets; United States: and the market economy

Marshall, Jason

Martha, Inc.
(Byron)

Marx, Karl and the transformation of labor

Maude

Mauss, Marcel

McKibben, Bill

medical taxonomy

“Men's Despair, and Hope” (Bentley)

mental illness

Mental Illness Foundation

Merleau-Ponty, Maurice

Merry, Sally

“metacommentary”

Metrazol

“Midas effect”

Mill, John Stuart

Millay, Edna St. Vincent

Miller, Frank

Miller, Peter

Milton, John

M'Naughten rule

modernity

Mohammed, Jinnah

Mol, Annemarie

Mondimore, Francis

Mood Apart, A
(Whybrow)

mood charts contemporary charts; historical perspective o and the “Mood Tree,” sample charts on the Web; technology of;

World Mood Chart

“Mood Disorders: The Pharmacologic Prevention of Recurrences”

Mood Disorders: The World's Major Public Health Problem
(Ayd et al.)

moods definitions of; and the economic situation of individuals; and emotions evading; and excessive spending habits; Hindu interpretation of; and markets; mood disorders and social life; mood hygiene; and motivatio optimizing.
See also
mood charts

Moodswing
(Fieve)

“moral thermometer”

Morrison, Toni

motivation

Mr. Market

multiple personality disorder (MPD)

Munch, Edvard

Murphy, Eddie

Murray, D. W.

 

narcissism

National Depression and Manic Depression Association (NDMDA)

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

National Institutes of Mental Health (NIMH)

Nemeroff, Charles

neoliberalism neoliberal free-market policies

neurasthenia

Neurontin

neuroscience

neurotransmitters

New Freedom Commission on Mental Health

New Jersey

norepinephrine

norms; gender; and subject formation

Nuckolls, Charles

Nussbaum, Martha

 

O'Keeffe, Georgia

Olanzapine

One World Ready or Not: The Manic Logic of Global Capitalism
(Grieder)

Orange County, California; as “postsuburban”

Organization Man, The
(Whyte)

Organon

Orlistat

Orr, Jackie

 

Pamelor

pathogens

Paxil

performance concepts of; dramatic performance in Fiji; and gender identity manic performances; patient dramatizations and
rasa-bhava
theory; and style verbal performance.
See also
diagnosis: performative effect of; style

performativity/“performativity” theory

personhood and autonomy; recovering.
See also
manic depression: effect of on personhood

Phaedrus
(Plato)

physician/patient “contact zone”

Plath, Sylvia

Plato

Pocock, John

Poe, Edgar Allan

Pollock, Jackson

Porter, Cole

Porter, Roy

Postrel, Virginia

Pratt, Mary Louise

prescription drugs.
See
psychotropic drugs

Prozac

psychiatry, and racial stereotypes

psychology discursive; and the forms of psychological knowledge

psychotropic drugs as a commodity; as co-performers; different meanings of across cultures doctors' concerns about drug cocktails; fear of as “poison,” living with; “magic” of; and the need for specificity of drugs among patients; personal responses to by patients; personification of; side effects of Web postings by patients concerning.
See also
psychotropic drugs, marketing of

psychotropic drugs, marketing of advertising expenditures for and the concept of “borrowed interest,” and cultural connections; and direct-to-consumer (DTC) marketing sales figures for (1990-1999); side effects

 

race

Rack, Phillip

rationality doctors' rationality; in everyday life; and the irrational performing rationally; patients' rationality; and the rational/irrational abyss rational/irrational designations; and selfawareness and subjection

Recognizing the Depressed Patient
(Ayd)

Redd, Alice Faye

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