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    This groundbreaking book challenges the medicalized approach to women's experiences including menstruation, pregnancy, and menopause and suggests that there are better ways for women to cope with real issues they may face. Before any woman diets, douches, botoxes, reduces, reconstructs, or fills a prescription for antidepressants, statins, hormones, menstrual suppressants, or diet pills, she should read this book. Contesting common medical practice, the book addresses the many aspects of women's lives that have been targeted as "deficient" in order to support the billion-dollar profits of the medical-pharmacological industry and suggests alternatives to these "remedies." The contributors-psychologists, sociologists, and health experts-are also gender experts and feminist scholars who recognize the ways in which gender is an important aspect of the human experience. In this eye-opening work, they challenge the marketing and "science" that increasingly render women's bodies and experiences as a series of symptoms, diseases, and dysfunctions that require treatment by medical professionals who prescribe pharmaceutical and surgical interventions. Each article in the book addresses the marketing of a specific "condition" that has been constructed in a way that convinces a woman that her body is inadequate or her experience and behavior are not good enough. Among the topics addressed are menstruation, menopause, pregnancy, post-partum adjustment, sexual desire, weight, body dissatisfaction, moodiness, depression, grief, and anxiety.
  Maureen C. McHugh, PhD, teaches gender and diversity at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP).
  
  Joan C. Chrisler, PhD, is the Class of 1943 Professor of Psychology at Connecticut College.
  Series Foreword
  
  Michele A. Paludi, Series Editor
  
  Foreword
  
  Paula J. Caplan
  
  Introduction: The Medicalization of Women's Bodies and Everyday Experience
  
  Maureen C. McHugh and Joan C. Chrisler
  
  1. Pregnancy and Birth as a Medical Crisis
  
  Ruthbeth D. Finerman, Adriane M. F. Sanders, and Lynda M. Sagrestano
  
  2. (Re)Productive Disorders: The Expanding Marketplace of Infertility Medicine
  
  Emily Breitkopf and Lisa R. Rubin
  
  3. The Medicalization of the Menstrual Cycle: Menstruation as a Disorder
  
  Jessica Barnack-Tavlaris
  
  4. The Medicalization of Women's Moods: Premenstrual Syndrome and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder
  
  Joan C. Chrisler and Jennifer A. Gorman
  
  5. Menopause: Deficiency Disease or Normal Reproductive Transition?
  
  Heather Dillaway
  
  6. Menopause and Sexuality: Resisting Representations of the Abject Asexual Woman
  
  Jane M. Ussher, Janette Perz, and Chloe Parton
  
  7. Women's Sexual Problems: Is There a Pill for That?
  
  Leonore Tiefer
  
  8. The Thin Ideal: A "Wrong Prescription" Sold to Many and Achievable by Few
  
  Mindy J. Erchull
  
  9. From Fat Shaming to Size Acceptance: Challenging the Medical Management of Fat Women
  
  Ashley E. Kasardo and Maureen C. McHugh
  
  10. Medicalizing Women's Weight: Bariatric Surgery and Weight-Loss Drugs
  
  Julie Konik and Christine A. Smith
  
  11. Can Women's Body Image Be "Fixed"? Women's Bodies, Well-Being, and Cosmetic Surgery
  
  Charlotte N. Markey and Patrick M. Markey
  
  12. Women's Loss of Self through Antidepressants: The Depression Diagnosis as a Form of Social Control
  
  Alisha Ali
  
  13. Mourning Matters: Women and the Medicalization of Grief
  
  Leeat Granek
  
  Index
  
  About the Editors and Contributors