<p><em>Women and Depression: Recovery and Resistance</em> takes a welcome look at women’s experiences of living well after depression. Lafrance argues that the social construction of femininity is dangerous for women’s health and ultimately central to their experiences of depression. Beginning with a critical examination of the ways in which women’s depression is a product of the social political and interpersonal realities of their everyday lives the analysis moves on to explore an often ignored aspect of women’s experience – how women manage to ‘recover’ and be well after depression. </p><p>The book draws on extensive in-depth interviews with women who have been depressed as well as on previous research and on analyses of representations of women’s health practices in the media. In this way Lafrance critically examines how women negotiate and actively resist hegemonic discourses of femininity in their struggles to recover from depression and be well. Threaded throughout the analysis is the exploration of a variety of subjects related to women’s distress and health including:</p><ul> <li>negotiating identity </li> <li>the medicalization of women’s misery</li> <li>women’s narratives of resistance</li> <li>the material and discursive context of women’s self-care</li> </ul><p>In exploring the taken-for-granted aspects of women’s experiences Lafrance sheds light on the powerful but often invisible constraints on women’s wellbeing and the multiple and creative ways in which they resist these constraints in their everyday lives. These insights will be of interest to students and scholars of psychology sociology women’s studies social work counseling and nursing.</p>
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