Examining migraines in children and the socially disabling effects that chronic pain can have, this book uses medical, political and cultural discourse to convey a sense of invisible disability in child migraine sufferers and its subsequent oppression within hegemonic educational and medical policy.
Examining migraines in children and the socially disabling effects that chronic pain can have, this book uses medical, political and cultural discourse to convey a sense of invisible disability in child migraine sufferers and its subsequent oppression within hegemonic educational and medical policy.
Susan E. Honeyman is Professor of English at University of Nebraska at Kearney, USA.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Figures Preface: a Note to Readers Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Migraine as Invisible Disability 2. A History of Pediatric Pain and the Politics of Pill Culture 3. Materia Medica 4. Testifying Against Trigemony 5. Visibility Machines and Pain Proxies Conclusion Afterword: Scars (a Migraine Diary) Appendix References Index
List of Figures Preface: a Note to Readers Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Migraine as Invisible Disability 2. A History of Pediatric Pain and the Politics of Pill Culture 3. Materia Medica 4. Testifying Against Trigemony 5. Visibility Machines and Pain Proxies Conclusion Afterword: Scars (a Migraine Diary) Appendix References Index
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