Description
Families are riddled with untold secrets. But Stephen Hinshaw would have never thought that in his family a profound secret had been kept for 18 years. From the moment his father revealed his long history with mental illness and involuntary hospitalizations, Hinshaw knew his life would be changed forever.
Hinshaw terms these insights from his father as a psychological birth.” After years of experiencing the ups and downs of his fathers illness without knowing it existed, watching him disappear for weeks at a time only to return as the loving father he had always known, everything he experienced as a child now made a strange sense. He learned as much as possible about his fathers illness, and what began as an exploration into his fathers past and mental health turned into a full-fledged career as a clinical psychologist.
In Another Kind of Madness, Hinshaw explores the burden of living in a family loaded with mental illness and debunks the stigma behind it. In todays society, mental health problems can result in a loss of a drivers license, inability to vote or run for office, ineligibility for jury service, or automatic relinquishment of child custody. With a moving personal narrative and shocking facts about how America views mental health conditions in the 21st century, Another Kind of Madness is a passionate call to arms regarding the importance of destigmatizing mental illness.
Author Information
Stephen Hinshaw is a professor of psychology at UC Berkeley and of psychiatry at UC San Francisco. He has authored 350 scientific publications plus The Mark of Shame: Stigma of Mental Illness and an Agenda for Change (Oxford, 2007), the first U.S. book on mental illness stigma. His internationally renowned research has been covered in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Time, The Economist, and The Wall Street Journal, among others. He lives in Berkeley, CA.
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