Of Others Inside : Insanity, Addiction and Belonging in America.

By: Weinberg, DarinContributor(s): Turner, Bryan SMaterial type: TextTextPublisher: Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 2008Copyright date: ©2005Description: 1 online resource (248 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781592134052Subject(s): Addicts -- United States -- Social conditions | Homeless persons -- Mental health -- United States | Homeless persons -- Mental health services -- United States | Homelessness -- United States | Marginality, Social -- United States | Mentally ill -- United States -- Social conditionsGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Of Others Inside : Insanity, Addiction and Belonging in AmericaDDC classification: 362.20973 LOC classification: HV3009Online resources: Click to View
Contents:
Intro -- Contents -- Foreword by Bryan S. Turner -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction: Beyond Objectivism and Subjectivismin the Sociology of Mental Health -- Part I: A History of Insanities and Addictions Among Marginalized Americans -- 2 Setting the Stage -- 3 Addictions and Insanities: Two Fields and Their Phenomena -- II A Tale of Two Programs -- 4 Canyon House -- 5 Twilights -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Index.
Summary: There is little doubt among scientists and the general public that homelessness, mental illness, and addiction are inter-related. In Of Others Inside, Darin Weinberg examines how these inter-relations have taken form in the United States. He links the establishment of these connections to the movement of mental health and addiction treatment from redemptive processes to punitive ones and back again, and explores the connection between social welfare, rehabilitation, and the criminal justice system. Seeking to offer a new sociological understanding of the relationship between social exclusion and mental disability, Of Others Inside considers the general social conditions of homelessness, poverty, and social marginality in the U.S. Weinberg also explores questions about American perceptions of these conditions, and examines in great detail the social reality of mental disability and drug addiction without reducing people's suffering to simple notions of biological fate or social disorder.
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Intro -- Contents -- Foreword by Bryan S. Turner -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction: Beyond Objectivism and Subjectivismin the Sociology of Mental Health -- Part I: A History of Insanities and Addictions Among Marginalized Americans -- 2 Setting the Stage -- 3 Addictions and Insanities: Two Fields and Their Phenomena -- II A Tale of Two Programs -- 4 Canyon House -- 5 Twilights -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Index.

There is little doubt among scientists and the general public that homelessness, mental illness, and addiction are inter-related. In Of Others Inside, Darin Weinberg examines how these inter-relations have taken form in the United States. He links the establishment of these connections to the movement of mental health and addiction treatment from redemptive processes to punitive ones and back again, and explores the connection between social welfare, rehabilitation, and the criminal justice system. Seeking to offer a new sociological understanding of the relationship between social exclusion and mental disability, Of Others Inside considers the general social conditions of homelessness, poverty, and social marginality in the U.S. Weinberg also explores questions about American perceptions of these conditions, and examines in great detail the social reality of mental disability and drug addiction without reducing people's suffering to simple notions of biological fate or social disorder.

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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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