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Shaping Minds

A discourse analysis of Chinese-language community mental health literature

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ISBN 9789027206206 | EUR 90.00 | USD 135.00
 
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ISBN 9789027290830 | EUR 90.00 | USD 135.00
 
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Mental illness is an increasing concern of government health services across the globe. It is timely, therefore, that community education about mental illness is subject to discourse analysis. Shaping Minds explores how the psychoeducational message is presented to Chinese-speaking audiences in China, Taiwan and Australia. The book uniquely examines community education materials in a language rarely examined by discourse analysts, but which is nevertheless spoken by around a fifth of the world’s population and constitutes an important ‘minority’ language throughout the Western world. The book identifies the discursive features that characterise the Chinese-language texts and analyses them cross-culturally, highlighting the impact of cultural traditions, political systems and dominant conceptions of society. These insights into how Chinese-language community health pamphlets and handbooks are positioned to shape the minds of readers will engage both discourse analysts and mental health professionals providing services to Chinese-speaking communities across the globe.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 14 November 2008
Table of Contents
Cited by (8)

Cited by eight other publications

Zhang, Rongji, Demei Yang, Xiang Zhao & Tiantian Yang
2026. “Am I Truly Depressed or Just Pretending To Be?” A Discourse-Analytical Approach to Online Illness Narratives by People Living With Depression on Zhihu. Sage Open 16:1 DOI logo
Zhang, Yuan, Yifeng Lu, Yan Jin & Yubin Wang
2021. Individualizing mental health responsibilities on Sina Weibo: a content analysis of depression framing by media organizations and mental health institutions. Journal of Communication in Healthcare 14:2  pp. 163 ff. DOI logo
Zhang, Yan
2018. Governing Dementia: A Historical Investigation of the Power of States and Professionals in the Conceptualization of Dementia in China. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry 42:4  pp. 862 ff. DOI logo
Zhang, Yan
2025. Excess Stigma and Troubling Messaging: Debates about the Diagnostic Label Chidai for Dementia in China. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry 49:3  pp. 706 ff. DOI logo
Lanselle, Rainier
2017. Self as Other—Indigenous Psychology and the Defining of a Chinese Subjectivity. In Intercultural Communication with China [Encounters between East and West, ],  pp. 41 ff. DOI logo
Ramsay, Guy
2010. Mainland Chinese Family Caregiver Narratives in Mental Illness: Disruption and Continuity. Asian Studies Review 34:1  pp. 83 ff. DOI logo
Ramsay, Guy
2017. Taiwanese Stories of Dementia. Modern China 43:2  pp. 217 ff. DOI logo
Ramsay, Guy
2023. Violence, women, blood(line): Hong Kong films of severe mental illness. Journal of Multicultural Discourses 18:2  pp. 154 ff. DOI logo

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U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  2008040161 | Marc record
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