Bennett is great … in showing how the pill has pervaded popular culture and popular thinking. He coins the genre title of “psychopharmacological thriller,” a mouthful but apt: the film or TV show about not just drugs, but also their making, distribution, and effects. Under this last head, he unleashes a brilliant set piece on Carrie Mathison (played so well by Claire Danes in <i>Homeland.</i>)

The Philadelphia Inquirer

Robert Bennett's <i>Pill</i>, another volume in Bloomsbury's fine Object Lessons series … effectively looks at all areas of the history, understanding, and application of pills as maintenance tools (or presumed cures) in psychopharmacology … It's this careful, methodical journey Bennett takes through these medications and their effects as manifested through popular culture that makes <i>Pill</i> an effective, compelling book … <i>Pill</i> succinctly and comprehensively charts the enigmatic relationship humanity has had with wonder drugs of all sorts, particularly here Thorazine through Adderall. [Bennett] suggests, carefully, and with touching immediacy (especially through the final personal chapter), that there's still work to be done as we understand both the blessings and the curses of these drugs.

PopMatters

In this wide-ranging and readable book, Robert Bennett shows the many ways that our pills are us. <i>Pill </i>is a cautionary tale about putting our faith in easy cures, and necessary reading for anyone who wants to better understand our complex, anxious, and uncertain times.

Rachel Adams, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University, and author of Raising Henry: A Memoir of Motherhood, Disability, and Discovery (2013)

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Adept in its understanding of the relationship between pharmacology and culture, this book incisively demonstrates how psychotropic drugs engineer the modern self. <i>Pill</i> doesn’t invite us to ask our doctors about Zoloft but rather to ask ourselves how Zoloft defines us as individuals.

Lorenzo Servitje, Assistant Professor of Literature and Medicine, Lehigh University, USA, and co-editor of The Walking Med: Zombies and the Medical Image (2016)

Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things.

“You are what you eat.” Never is this truer than when we use medications, from beta blockers and aspirin to Viagra and epidurals—and especially psychotropic pills that transform our minds as well as our bodies.

Meditating on how modern medicine increasingly measures out human identity not in T. S. Eliot’s proverbial coffee spoons but in 1mg-, 5mg-, or 300mg-doses, Pill traces the uncanny presence of psychiatric pills through science, medicine, autobiography, television, cinema, literature, and popular music. Robert Bennett reveals modern psychopharmacology to be a brave new world in which human identities— thoughts, emotions, personalities, and selves themselves—are increasingly determined by the extraordinary powers of seemingly ordinary pills.

Object Lessons is published in partnership with an essay series in The Atlantic.

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Introduction: Pharmageddon
1 Thorazine (C17H19ClN2S): The Psychopharmacological Revolution
2 Valium (C16H13ClN2O): The Psychopharmacology of Everyday Life
3 Lithium (Li2CO3): The Psychopharmacological Thriller
4 Prozac (C17H18F3NO): Existential Quagmires
5 Adderall ((C9H13N)2H2SO4 + (C9H13N)2H2SO4 + (C9H13N)2C6H10O8 + (C9H13N)C4H7NO4H2O): Psychopharmacology Unbound
Coda: Waiting for Brad Pitt

Acknowledgements
List of Figures
Notes
Index

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Pill is a counter-intuitive cultural history of psychiatric medications. Turning the issue of mental illness upside down, it focuses not on mental illnesses themselves but on the objects, the simple pills, that profoundly alter the course of our lives—1mg, 5mg, or 300mg at a time—often in ways that we only dimly perceive.
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We all use medications of one kind or another, but how well do we really understand their complexities? What happens when medications don’t lead to cures, when they barely outperform placebos, when they produce unpredictable side effects, or when even your doctor cannot explain how they work?
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Object Lessons is a series of concise, collectable, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things. Each book starts from a specific inspiration: an historical event, a literary passage, a personal narrative, a technological innovation—and from that starting point explores the object of the title, gleaning a singular lesson or multiple lessons along the way. Featuring contributions from writers, artists, scholars, journalists, and others, the emphasis throughout is lucid writing, imagination, and brevity. Object Lessons paints a picture of the world around us, and tells the story of how we got here, one object at a time.
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Product details

ISBN
9781501341946
Published
2019-03-21
Publisher
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic USA
Weight
160 gr
Height
164 mm
Width
118 mm
Thickness
14 mm
Age
G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
176

Biographical note

Robert Bennett is Professor of English at Montana State University, USA. His previous publications include Deconstructing Post-WWII New York City (2003) and, as co-editor, Deconstructing Brad Pitt (Bloomsbury, 2014).