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Main description:
The experience of illness (both mental and physical) figures prominently in the critical thought and activism of the 1960s and 1970s, though it is largely overshadowed by practices of sexuality. Lisa Diedrich explores how and why illness was indeed so significant to the social, political, and institutional transformation beginning in the 1960s through the emergence of AIDS in the United States. A rich intervention-both theoretical and methodological, political and therapeutic-Indirect Action illuminates the intersection of illness, thought, and politics.
Not merely a revision of the history of this time period, Indirect Action expands the historiographical boundaries through which illness and health activism in the United States have been viewed. Diedrich explores the multiplicity illness-thought-politics through an array of subjects: queering the origin story of AIDS activism by recalling its feminist history; exploring health activism and the medical experience; analyzing psychiatry and self-help movements; thinking ecologically about counterpractices of generalism in science and medicine; and considering the experience and event of epilepsy and the witnessing of schizophrenia.
Indirect Action places illness in the leading role in the production of thought during the emergence of AIDS, ultimately showing the critical interconnectedness of illness and political and critical thought.
Contents:
Contents
Introduction: Illness-Thought-Activism
1. Doing Queer Love, circa 1985
Snapshot 1: Gregg Bordowitz's "The Order of Image Production," 2003 and "Queer Structures of Feeling," 1993
2. Que(e)rying the Clinic, circa 1970
Snapshot 2: Felix Guattari's "David Wojnarowicz," 1989
3. Enacting Clinical Experience, circa 1963
Snapshot 3: Samuel R. Delany's Happening, 1959
4. Thinking Ecologically, circa 1962 and 1971
Snapshot 4: Frantz Fanon's "Colonial War and Mental Disorders," 1961 and Isaac Julien's "Fanon," 1996
5. Drawing Epilepsy
Snapshot 5: Disability Law Center's Investigation of Bridgewater State Hospital, 2014, and Frederick Wiseman's Titicut Follies, 1967
6. Witnessing Schizophrenia
Afterimage: ACT-UP's "Drugs into Bodies," the Near Present
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: December, 2016
Pages: 312
Dimensions: 140.00 x 216.00 x 38.00
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: General Issues