
@article{ref1,
title="Problematizing the neurochemical subject of anti-depressant treatment: The limits of biomedical responses to women's emotional distress",
journal="Health (London)",
year="2013",
author="Fullagar, Simone and O'Brien, Wendy",
volume="17",
number="1",
pages="57-74",
abstract="In this article we situate empirical research into women's problematic experiences of anti-depressant medication within broader debates about pharmaceuticalization and the rise of the neurochemical self. We explore how women interpreted and problematized anti-depressant medication as it impeded their recovery in a number of ways. Drawing upon Foucauldian and feminist work we conceptualize anti-depressants as biotechnologies of the self that shaped how women thought about and acted upon their embodied (and hence gendered) subjectivities. Through the interplay of biochemical, emotional and socio-cultural effects medication worked to shape women's self-in-recovery in ways that both reinscribed and undermined a neurochemical construction of depression. Our analysis outlines two key discursive constructions that focused on women's problematization of the neurochemical self in response to the side-effects of anti-depressant use. We identified how the failure of medication to alleviate depression contributed to women's reinterpretation of recovery as a process of 'working' on the emotional self. We argue that women's stories act as a form of subjugated knowledge about the material and discursive forces shaping depression and recovery. These findings offer a gendered critique of scientific and market orientated rationalities underpinning neurochemical recovery that obscure the embodied relations of affect and the social conditions that enable the self to change.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1363-4593",
doi="10.1177/1363459312447255",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1363459312447255"
}