Madness Radio

Will Hall, Madness Radio
undefined
Jan 2, 2011 • 48min

Exporting Mental Disorders: Ethan Watters

How did pharmaceutical giant Glaxo Smith Kline create “depression” in Japan — and a billion dollar market for its anti-depressant drug Paxil? Why do people diagnosed with schizophrenia recover more in Tanzania than they do in the US? Can western-style psychotherapy help tsunami survivors in Sri Lanka? Ethan Watters, author of Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche, discusses how mental disorders are cultural products, defined in the US and then exported around the world. http://www.crazylikeus.comThe post Exporting Mental Disorders: Ethan Watters first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Dec 15, 2010 • 50min

Therapy for Psychosis: Daniel Mackler

Can therapy reach people in extreme states of “psychosis” — without using medications? Do we need to give a diagnosis to help someone? Why are counselors afraid to listen to their “mad” clients? New York psychotherapist and filmmaker Daniel Mackler discusses how be defied social work training in his work with people labeled with schizophrenia and bipolar, and what he learned from recent visits to successful treatment alternatives in Northern Europe. Daniel is the filmmaker of Take These Broken Wings and co-author with Matthew Morrissey of A Way Out of Madness. http://www.iraresoul.comThe post Therapy for Psychosis: Daniel Mackler first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Nov 3, 2010 • 57min

Meanings of Madness: Gail Hornstein

Seamstress Agnes Richter was locked away in a mental asylum in the 1890s, and was so determined to have a voice that she embroidered her personal story onto the jacket she wore on the ward. What is the hidden history of people writing their own narratives of going insane? How important is it to listen to the experiences of “mentally ill” people? Is there meaning in madness? Gail Hornstein, Mt. Holyoke College professor and author of Agnes’s Jacket: A Psychologist’s Search for the Meanings of Madness, discusses the work of the Hearing Voices Movement in the UK, peer run support communities including Freedom Center in the US, and why professionals should let patients speak for themselves. http://www.gailhornstein.com http://bit.ly/aG9bnSThe post Meanings of Madness: Gail Hornstein first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Oct 4, 2010 • 54min

Icarus Project: Sascha DuBrul

How did the New York underground of punk rock music, squatting, and homeless protest give rise to a thriving and innovative peer-run mental health community? Are there creative gifts to be found in the depths of madness? Does the future of Mad Pride lie in the joining of activism with spirituality? Icarus Project co-founder Sascha Altman DuBrul discusses his escape into apocalyptic visions and psychiatric hospitals, and how he was inspired to challenge the identity of bipolar disorder. scatter(at)theicarusproject(dot)net http://www.theicarusproject.netThe post Icarus Project: Sascha DuBrul first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Aug 26, 2010 • 52min

Bipolar Medication Myths: Dr Joanna Moncrieff

Is bipolar disorder a disease? Can medications like lithium correct chemical imbalances and stabilize mood? Do psychiatric drugs act completely differently on the brain than recreational drugs? UK psychiatrist Dr. Joanna Moncrieff, author of The Myth Of The Chemical Cure: A Critique of Psychiatric Drug Treatment, discusses how seeing psychiatric medications as treatments for disease misleads the public about how they actually work, and obscures their potential for abuse as tools of social control. http://www.critpsynet.freeuk.com http://www.academyanalyticarts.org/moncrieff.htm http://www.mentalhealth.freeuk.com/howwork.pdfThe post Bipolar Medication Myths: Dr Joanna Moncrieff first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Jun 11, 2010 • 52min

Schizophrenia and Black Politics: Jonathan Metzl

How did the definition of schizophrenia change during the civil rights and Black Power era of the 1960s? Why did a disease primarily affecting withdrawn white housewives suddenly become focused on angry and “paranoid” African American men instead? Psychiatrist and historian Jonathan Metzl, author of The Protest Psychosis: How Schizophrenia Became a Black Disease, discusses racism and social control in psychiatric diagnosis, and how Black protest was turned into a mental disorder and psychosis was a political tool. jmetzl(at)umich(dot)edu http://bit.ly/byOeIwThe post Schizophrenia and Black Politics: Jonathan Metzl first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Apr 19, 2010 • 53min

Open Dialogue Alternative: Mary Olson

Is a ‘psychotic’ crisis inside one person’s mind — or does it happen between people, in their relationship? Can therapy untangle the web of madness by addressing the family, providers, and entire social network? Smith College social worker and Fulbright scholar Mary Olson discusses the innovative work of Jaakko Seikkula and colleagues’ Open Dialogue Approach in Finland, which has achieved dramatic success helping people through extreme states labeled ‘psychosis’ and ‘schizophrenia’ — while relying much less on medication and hospitalization. http://www.dialogicpractice.net http://beyondmeds.com/2010/01/04/alternative-for-psychosis http://www.willhall.net/opendialogueThe post Open Dialogue Alternative: Mary Olson first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Apr 2, 2010 • 48min

Violent Voices: Erica van den Akker

People who hear voices are no more violent than anyone else — but what about the small number of voice hearers that do actually commit violent crimes? Are medications and locked wards the best way to help those who act on their aggressive “command hallucinations?” What is the relationship between trauma, violence, and voices? Dutch psychiatric social worker and Hearing Voices Movement member Erica van den Akker discusses her innovative counseling work with violent offenders in the Netherlands. alpouvar1(at)tomaatnet(dot)nlThe post Violent Voices: Erica van den Akker first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Mar 2, 2010 • 52min

Prison Mental Health: Terry Kupers

The US incarcerates more people than any country in the world – and 70% are people of color. Do we need better mental health care inside prisons — or do prisons themselves cause trauma and madness? Psychiatrist and civil lawsuit expert witness Dr.Terry Kupers, author of Prison Madness: The Mental Health Crisis Behind Bars and What We Must Do About It, discusses overcrowding, racism, sensory deprivation, isolation, and sexual abuse in the disgraceful US prison system. http://www.afsc.org/stopmax http://www.criticalresistance.org http://www.aclu.org/prisoners-rightsThe post Prison Mental Health: Terry Kupers first appeared on Madness Radio.
undefined
Jan 21, 2010 • 48min

Schizophrenia Psychotherapy: Catherine Penney

Can a severe, chronic case of “schizophrenia” ever recover? Is psychotherapy an alternative to medications? What role does trauma play in madness? Hear the inspiring story of how Catherine Penney, RN, was catatonic and locked in a hospital back ward for years, and then emerged to create a new alternative healing community. http://www.dantescure.com http://www.desertgathering.com http://www.iraresoul.com/dvd.htmlThe post Schizophrenia Psychotherapy: Catherine Penney first appeared on Madness Radio.

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app