Abstract

Emily Martin, Bipolar Expeditions: Mania and Depression in American Culture. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007. 370 pp. In her new book, Emily Martin, well known for her cultural analyses of subjects such as childbirth and immunology, addresses the popular fascination with manic behavior in the U.S. today. One of her main goals is to answer the question of how popular notions of are related to psychiatric conceptions of bipolar disorder (also called manic-depressive illness). Bipolar Disorder is a serious mental illness with an estimated prevalence among adults of approximately 2.5 percent. It is characterized by dramatic and episodic mood swings ranging from to depression. The episodes can also involve delusions, typically more often in episodes of than in depression. Although bipolar disorder is treatable, it is chronic, debilitating, and can lead to suicide. As Kay Redfield Jameson explained it in her 1995 book, An Unquiet Mind, Manic-depression distorts moods and thoughts, incites dreadful behaviors, destroys the basis of rational thought, and too often erodes the desire and will to live. It is an illness that is biological in its origins, yet one that feels psychological in the experience of it; an illness that is unique in conferring advantage and pleasure, yet one that brings in its wake almost unendurable suffering and, not infrequently, suicide. Martin notes, however, that has also been associated with creativity, energy, and capitalist success. Noting that the subject of has received less scholarly attention than depression, she aims to find out how people with and the professionals who study and treat it use the concept of mania across a range of settings: support groups, clinical presentations, and media coverage, for example. Martin pays special attention to how concepts of rationality and irrationality are fitted into the framework of mania, since has long been associated in the U.S. and western Europe with madness and insanity. As someone who has bipolar disorder, Martin is interested in exploring the opposition between rationality and insanity. Is she, herself, rational? Being known as a manic-depressive person, she writes, throws one's rationality into question, and yet increasingly in the U.S., mania has become associated with economic (rational) success. As a medical anthropologist, Martin is concerned with showing that is a cultural phenomenon and determining what role and associated concepts play in contemporary culture: for example, in the domains of mental health care, the pharmaceutical industry, capitalism and financial markets. In Part One, Manic Depression as Experience, Martin does what she does best: documenting medical and psychological constructs as lived experience. Members of a support group she studies describe the tension between as something within their power and also overpowering, as if it possessed them. In the context of bipolar disorder, this opposition ramifies to a bifurcation of the world into multiple opposing spheres, such as the part (depression or mania) and the system (oscillating, mutually constitutive forces), self (a true self) and other (becoming a person or different personalities during episodes), irrationality (madness) and rationality (the medicalization of mood and motivation, and the frameworks people use to describe their mania, or perform their as behavior that is at least partly under their own control). Martin is not suggesting that people with bipolar disorder can be characterized by one side of an opposition. The opposition, or rather one's existence at multiple sites simultaneously along a bipolar continuum, represents the way that people experience themselves. She stresses that is, in the words of Merleau- Ponty, an expressive space defined by both the mediation of these poles and some element of control over movement between them. …

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