Abstract
This book makes the unorthodox claim that there is no such thing as mental health. It also deglamourises nature-based psychotherapies, deconstructs therapeutic landscapes and redefines mental health and wellbeing as an ecological process distributed in the environment – rather than a psychological manifestation trapped within the mind of a human subject. Traditional and contemporary philosophies are merged with new science of the mind as each chapter progressively examples a posthuman account of mental health as physically dispersed amongst things – emoji, photos, tattoos, graffiti, cities, mountains – in this precarious time labelled the Anthropocene. Utilising experimental walks, play scripts and creative research techniques, this book disrupts traditional notions of the subjective self, resulting in an Extended Body Hypothesis – a pathway for alternative narratives of human-environment relations to flourish more ethically. This transdisciplinary inquiry will appeal to anyone interested in non-classificatory accounts of mental health, particularly concerning areas of social and environmental equity – post-nature.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Palgrave Macmillan |
| Number of pages | 316 |
| ISBN (Print) | 9789811333255 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published online - Jan 2019 |
Keywords
- mental health and wellbeing
- post-qualitative inquiry
- anthropocene
- posthumanism
- space and place
- green space
- therapeutic and restorative landscapes
- nature-culture relations
- new materialisms
- contemporary animism
- theory of mind
- psychogeography
- rhizoanalysis
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