Bonnie Burstow
Canadian psychotherapist (1945–2020) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bonnie Burstow (March 6, 1945 – January 4, 2020) was a Canadian psychotherapist, author, and anti-psychiatry scholar. She was a professor in the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) at the University of Toronto.
Bonnie Burstow | |
---|---|
Born | Bonnie Judith Grower (1945-03-06)March 6, 1945 |
Died | January 4, 2020(2020-01-04) (aged 74) |
Resting place | Pardes Chaim Cemetery, Toronto[2] |
Nationality | Canadian |
Education | University of Manitoba University of Toronto |
Known for | Anti-psychiatry |
Spouse |
John Arthur Burstow
(m. 1966; div. 1972) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Education |
Institutions | Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto |
Thesis | Authentic human existence—its nature, its opposite, its meaning for therapy: a rendering of and a response to the position of Jean-Paul Sartre (1982) |
Burstow argued that conditions that the medical profession described as mental illnesses are in fact rational reactions to social, economic and political conditions and that psychiatry is rooted in patriarchy with a tendency to view troubled women as “hysterical” and to overdiagnose their conditions and overmedicate them. Burstow said that in psychiatry's view: “Women are disordered if they acted like women; women are disordered if they didn’t act like women."[3]