Full metadata
Title
Dancing with madness: rewriting identity through disruption
Description
Madness is disruptive. It doesn't play by the rules. Madness is influenced, created, and caused by many different factors; it can be at different times disorienting, debilitating, or a space of radical potential. In this thesis, I argue for the empowering potential of narrative and rewriting identity in the face of painful disruptions. I argue that the way that we conceptualize madness and how we internalize trauma affects how we reconfigure identity as an ongoing process and therefore whether and how we are able to embrace creative, diverse and dynamically empowered futures. I argue against positivist traditions of categorization and concept formation when it comes to madness – whether medical or historic//cultural/social. I first use similar tools to “categorize the categorizers” and later break away from positivist tradition through feminist inquiry, pushing against static, linear, and inactive kind and family conceptual hierarchies with my own experience. I use active feminist frameworks and phenomenological ontologies to argue for a corrective epistemic justice exposing reductive gaps in the literature and highlighting the links between violence/oppression/trauma/agency and mental illness that positivist models minimize. I employ personal experiences of gender-based violence and my own changing and intersectional understanding and experience of depression and mental health as a lens through which different pathways can emerge. I use memoir as method to disturb the binary limitations of madness models, instead offering a conceptualization of madness as fluid, intersectional, changing, and deeply personal: an experience that cannot be reduced and compartmentalized. Finally, I explore the pain of trauma and madness as well as the possibility therein towards action as a way of reclaiming self-agency.
Date Created
2018
Contributors
- Townsley, Rebecca (Author)
- Behl, Natasha (Thesis advisor)
- Muphy-Erfani, Julie (Committee member)
- Colbern, Allan (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
iv, 114 pages : color illustrations, 1 color map
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.49420
Statement of Responsibility
by Rebecca Townsley
Description Source
Retrieved on June 22, 2018
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: M.A., Arizona State University, 2018
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 103-107)
Field of study: Social justice and human rights
System Created
- 2018-06-01 08:13:20
System Modified
- 2021-08-26 09:47:01
- 3 years 3 months ago
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