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Keohane, Kieran Petersen, Anders Berg, Bert van den

Late modern subjectivity and its discontents: anxiety, depression and alzheimer’s disease - United Kingdom -- Routledge 2018 - 113p.

Notes on contributors

Preface

1. Introduction to a Series

2. Modern Subjectivity / Postmodern Subjectivity (Dany-Robert Dufour)

3. Return to an Age of Anxiety – The Embedding of a Late Modern Social Pathology

4. Sadean Depression and the Work of Culture

5. Alzheimer’s Disease: a Social Pathology of Contemporary Civilization

6. A Research ProspectiveIndex



This book analyses three of the most prevalent illnesses of late modernity: anxiety, depression and Alzheimer's disease, in terms of their relation to cultural pathologies of the social body. Usually these conditions are interpreted clinically in terms of individualized symptoms and responded to discretely, as though for the most part unrelated to each other. However, these diseases also have a social and cultural profile that transcends their particular symptomologies and etiologies. Anxiety, depression and Alzheimer's are diseases related to disorders of the collective esprit de corps of contemporary society. Multidisciplinary in approach, the book addresses questions of how these conditions are manifest at both the individual and collective levels in relation to hegemonic biomedical and psychologistic understandings. Rejecting such reductive diagnoses, the authors argue that anxiety, depression and Alzheimer's disease, as well as other contemporary epidemics, are to be analysed in the light of individual and collective experiences of profound and radical changes in our civilization. A diagnosis of our times, Late Modern Subjectivity and its Discontents will appeal to a broad range of scholars with interests in health and illness, the sociology of medicine and contemporary life.

9781138364448


Alzheimer Disease
Anxiety
Depression
Social medicine

362.196 KEO/L

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