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Introduction/Abstract The intersection of gender and mental health has long been a subject of critical examination within psychology, sociology, and feminist theory. Central to this discourse is the persistent overrepresentation of women in diagnoses of “madness,” a phenomenon that is both historically rooted and contemporarily reinforced by various societal mechanisms. Jane M. Ussher’s seminal work, The Madness of Women: Myth and Experience (2011), interrogates the genealogy, constructions, and lived realities of women’s psychological distress, challenging the notion that such conditions are merely medical pathologies. Instead, Ussher situates women’s “madness” within a framework of gendered social regulation, objectification, and resistance. Simultaneously, emergent computational approaches reveal how gendered mental health stigma is perpetuated and encoded in contemporary technologies, notably within language models that inform digital health interventions and social media platforms (Lin et al., 2023). These findings underscore the enduring and evolving nature of gendered stigma, reinforcing the urgency of critically re-examining mental health paradigms. This essay synthesizes Ussher’s multi-factorial feminist analysis with recent computational research on gendered stigma, exploring the myths and realities of women’s madness, the regulatory function of psychiatric diagnosis, and the implications for contemporary psychological practice and digital culture. Key words- Foucaultian, Women, Pathologization, Distress, Stigma, Madness.
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Dr. Narinder Kour
Philips (Finland)
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Dr. Narinder Kour (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0aace55ba8ef6d83b704f2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20230450