Post-natal depression : psychology, science, and the transition to motherhood
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Post-natal depression : psychology, science, and the transition to motherhood
(Women and psychology)
Routledge, 1998
- : hbk
- : pbk
Available at 12 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 133-141) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: hbk ISBN 9780415163620
Description
Post-Natal Depression challenges the expectation that it is normal to be a 'happy mother'. It provides a radical critique of the traditional medical and social science explanations of 'post natal depression' by supplying a systematic feminist psychological analysis of women's experiences following childbirth. Paula Nicolson argues that, far from it being an abnormal, undesirable, pathological condition, it is a normal, healthy response to a series of losses.
Post Natal Depression makes an important contribution to the psychology of women and feminist research and will be of interst to psychologists, social scientists, nurses and doctors.
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780415163637
Description
Post-Natal Depression challenges the expectation that it is normal to be a 'happy mother'. It provides a radical critique of the traditional medical and social science explanations of 'post natal depression' by supplying a systematic feminist psychological analysis of women's experiences following childbirth. Paula Nicolson argues that, far from it being an abnormal, undesirable, pathological condition, it is a normal, healthy response to a series of losses.
Post Natal Depression makes an important contribution to the psychology of women and feminist research and will be of interst to psychologists, social scientists, nurses and doctors.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1 Women's experience of motherhood 2 Competing explanations of post-natal depression 3 The context of post-natal depression 4 Post-natal care and 'maternity blues' 5 Reflexivity, intervention and the construction of post-natal depression 6 Loss, happiness and post-natal depression: the ultimate paradox 7 Knowledge, myth and the meaning of post-natal depression
by "Nielsen BookData"