Contributors |
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xix | |
Foreword: Silence No More |
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xxiii | |
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Section I Setting the Stage: Social, Biomedical, and Ethical Issues in Understanding Women's Depression |
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1 | (96) |
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Chapter 1 Introduction: Culture, Self-Silencing, and Depression: A Contextual-Relational Perspective |
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3 | (16) |
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Chapter 2 The Social Causes of Women's Depression: A Question of Rights Violated? |
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19 | (28) |
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Chapter 3 Drugs Don't Talk: Do Medication and Biological Psychiatry Contribute to Silencing the Self? |
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47 | (26) |
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Chapter 4 The Itinerant Researcher: Ethical and Methodological Issues in Conducting Cross-Cultural Mental Health Research |
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73 | (24) |
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Maria R. Scharron-del Rio |
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Section II Self-Silencing and Depression Across Cultures |
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97 | (234) |
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Introduction to Section II On the Critical Importance of Relationships for Women's Well-Being |
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99 | (8) |
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Chapter 5 Women's Self-Silencing and Depression in the Socio-cultural Context of Germany |
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107 | (22) |
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Chapter 6 Gender as Culture: The Meanings of Self-Silencing in Women and Men |
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129 | (18) |
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Chapter 7 "I Don't Express My Feelings to Anyone": How Self-Silencing Relates to Gender and Depression in Nepal |
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147 | (28) |
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Chapter 8 Silencing the Self across Generations and Gender in Finland |
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175 | (28) |
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Chapter 9 The Meaning of Self-Silencing in Polish Women |
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203 | (24) |
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Chapter 10 Exploring the Immigrant Experience through Self-Silencing Theory and the Full-Frame Approach: The Case of Caribbean Immigrant Women in Canada and the United States |
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227 | (14) |
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Chapter 11 Deconstructing Gendered Discourses of Love, Power, and Violence in Intimate Relationships: Portuguese Women's Experiences |
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241 | (20) |
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Chapter 12 Authentic Self-Expression: Gender, Ethnicity, and Culture |
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261 | (24) |
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Linda (Gratch) Vaden-Goad |
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Chapter 13 Silencing the Self and Personality Vulnerabilities Associated with Depression |
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285 | (28) |
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Chapter 14 Sociopolitical, Gender, and Cultural Factors in the Conceptualization and Treatment of Depression among Haitian Women |
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313 | (18) |
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Section III The Health Effects of Self-Silencing |
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331 | (184) |
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Introduction to Section III Empowering Depressed Women: The Importance of a Feminist Lens |
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333 | (10) |
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Chapter 15 Supporting Voice in Women Living with HIV/AIDS |
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343 | (20) |
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Chapter 16 Facilitating Women's Development through the Illness of Cancer: Depression, Self-Silencing, and Self-Care |
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363 | (18) |
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Chapter 17 Eating Disorders and Self-Silencing: A Function-Focused Approach to Treatment |
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381 | (18) |
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Chapter 18 Self-Silencing and the Risk of Heart Disease and Death in Women: The Framingham Offspring Study |
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399 | (16) |
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Chapter 19 Silencing the Heart: Women in Treatment for Cardiovascular Disease |
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415 | (20) |
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Chapter 20 Disruption of the Silenced Self: The Case of Premenstrual Syndrome |
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435 | (24) |
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Chapter 21 "I Wasn't Being True to Myself": Women's Narratives of Postpartum Depression |
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459 | (26) |
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Chapter 22 Seeking Safety with Undesirable Outcomes: Women's Self-Silencing in Abusive Intimate Relationships and Implications for Health Care |
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485 | (30) |
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Commentary: Self-Silencing and Women's Depression |
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505 | (10) |
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Appendix A The Silencing the Self Scale |
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515 | (4) |
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Index |
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519 | |