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The Shipping News [Paperback]

Proulx
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Prentice Hall & IBD (2 Oct 1994)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 000771873X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007718733
  • ASIN: 0020360789
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 11.8 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (81 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,158,701 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Annie Proulx
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Product Description

Review

`Fast becoming a contemporary classic... this book tries both to be critical and engender critical thinking in a number of ways. It offers an overview of a number of theories that address human distress as well as particular forms of "pathology". This book effectively highlights the way that western society has taken "normal"; and "abnormal" emotional states to be factual entities rather than the constructed understandings of human phenomena that they are.... should be on the reading list of every course/module that attends to human distress' - Journal of the Society for Existential Analysis

`I find this one of the most reasonable and persuasive analyses of this complex and fraught area. The final chapter includes a list of 28 journals and organizations considered to have a more enlightened view of mental health issues. There are also many valuable references' - British Journal of Medical Psychology

`The role of power relations and how these relations are reflected in our language and practices cannot be ignored... I find this book provocative as well as readable... the discursive method surely leads to reflections that I would not like to be without as a researcher and clinician... Given the increasing use of diagnoses in mental health care and the biological language often used in psychiatry, I consider this book an important contribution to our understanding of psychopathology' - Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy

`This is an extremely timely book, essential reading for all those disturbed by the surreptitious colonisation of the human potential field by anti-humanistic philosophies and practices. Drawing upon Foucault, the book "deconstructs" the language and institutions that hold the notion of "psychopathology" in place, subjecting it to an unrelenting philosophical critique and proposing alternative, philosophically sustainable and more democratic and human(e) ways of conceptualizing emotional and "mental" suffering... this book lays bare the fundamental ideological basis of the psychopathologising mentality. If you are open to questioning at root the philosophical assumptions underlying, and often unconsciously "constructing", your own therapeutic practice, then you will surely find Deconstructing Psychopathology one of the most important books to appear in years. I unreservedly recommend it' - Self & Society

`Although there has been a good deal of critical writing on various aspects of "psychopathology" in the last few years, this is the first book which attempts a general deconstruction of the area. The authors therefore faced a formidable task not only in setting out the complex theoretical frameworks necessary for this task, but also in covering a wide enough area to show their general applicability and relevance... the authors have put a prodigious amount of information and ideas [into this book]... The main premises are that, far from discovering and cataloguing mental disorders which exist "out there"... psychologists and psychiatrists construct psychopathology using a language surrounded by assumptions and values which are rarely made explicit or subjected to critical scrutiny... Throughout, the authors emphasize the interdependence of language, knowledge and power, and the importance of focusing on the professionals themselves as well as on those who are the usual subjects of our theories and practices. Given the scope of the task and the relative brevity of the book, the authors succeed very well indeed in conveying both the scale of the problem and the importance of an analysis in which language is central. One of the strengths of this book is the wealth of material and analysis contained in each chapter... this book is to be highly recommended. It is, above all, thought-provoking. It challenges professionals to abandon the idea that they are neutrally "doing science" and urges them to be as willing to make themselves objects of study as they are their clients. It is not a comfortable book to read: it is not, after all, flattering to be asked to see oneself as part of the problem and not as part of the solution. The book... emphasizes the urgent need for debate about some of the questions' - Behaviour Research and Therapy

`The impassioned intentions of the five authors have led them to write this text, which demonstrates a benign concern for those who are construed as having "psychopathology"... I welcomed the list of user-friendly groups and I loved the material on the Hearing Voices Network' - Medical Sociology News

`An excellent introduction to the relevance of the works of Derrida and Foucault to the field of psychopathology. In addition, there are thumbnail sketches of Laingian antipsychiatry, noting the real although neglected place of David Cooper. Equally helpful are the pieces on cognitive therapies and on family therapies. The Hearing Voices movement founded by Marius Romme is so rightly extolled... this book has almost taught this old dog some new tricks and I strongly recommend it to others... the seriousness is admirable and the erudition striking... an excellent contribution' - History and Philosophy of Psychology Newsletter

`For those working in mental health services who are not used to an approach based loosely on Foucault and Derrida this is undoubtedly a good starting point. My guess is that it would unnerve any reader with a naive realist perspective on "mental illness" in a thought-provoking way... The book provides a welcomed critical reading of psychiatric diagnosis and diagnoses, and offers the uninitiated reader a canter through the resources (research and practical projects) which have provided a set of alternatives or oppositions to orthodoxy in the mental health industry. Chapters... carry out this summary well and... are reason enough to encourage all those interested in the current politics of mental health to have the book on their shelves... it is genuinely politically concerned about people with mental health problems' - Disability & Society

`These essays are well-researched, professional articles. They are written by and for psychotherapists, psychologists, psychiatrists and educators already familiar with the "narrative" turn in therapy, and already disposed to take a sociological approach' - Mentalhelp --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Review

'Making a strong case for quality in a time of change, this accessible book challenges assumptions and suggests positive directions for future, high quality, value based and reflective practice' -
Michael Gasper, Early Years Consultant and author of Multi-agency Working in the Early Years --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
30 of 32 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Other reviews swing wildy between perfect 5 and damning 1. I'll settle for a contented 4. Only because it took a while to get into the book. Believe me: it's worth it.

Agree that it's hard to sympathise with Quoyle (our, um, hero) in the early chapters. Not the heroic type at all... wounded by his father's totally undisguised favouritism towards his spiteful brother. Overweight and ugly. Lacking self confidence, self control... Nor the clichéd anti-establishment anti-hero. In fact dull, dull, dull......

But hang on. Isn't this every man? Who among us is perfect in mind and body? Fat and unsure of ourselves. Tall, gangly and introspective. Tough on the outside, vulnerable and drawn towards self-destructive behaviour on the quiet.

That's how the book draws you slowly in. Characters may have improbably names, but they're more real than most perfect size 8, gym-toned fiction you'll ever read.

The small kids are drawn so well. Such a rarity in an adult novel.

The island and the sea are characters in themselves. Newfoundland, its inlets and offshore islands, abandoned settlements, pragmatic architecture. Punished by - and yet so dependent on - the sea, like the cruel parents that seem to crop up all too often in the book. Buffeted even more by wavering subsidy from remote government that really cannot see through the fog to get a proper picture of life on the the Rock. By the vagiaries of globalisation....

Sounds depressing. But ultimately a redemptive, quiet, gorgeously imperfect celebration of community and finding the inner strength to accept yourself, for all your flaws and the stuff you found it hard to deal with. I'll read it again and again.
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37 of 40 people found the following review helpful
By "rutta"
Format:Paperback
I can't believe it has taken me so long to discover 'The Shipping News'. Not just a soul enhancing story but a beautiful and refreshing narrative style. I have never come across a writer like Proulx, her mastery of prose and particulary description is unforgettable. From the first page I knew I was delving into something remarkable.

Reading this I was absoultely transported to life in Newfoundland. The cold, the ice, the wind and the danger all penetrated my imagination and I was frozen stiff reading most of it!

A tragedy with a loveable oaf as a hero, the unforgettable stalwart aunt with her grief and her memories, children with a hope for the future away from modern times. Escape into a harsh world which demands courage and resolution, but the rewards and the education the Quoyle family receive is touching and satisfying.

A tale of loss, history, roots, grief and new beginnings. Never does Proulx weave her plot through rose tinted spectacles and soft nostalgia, rendering this novel as among the best I have ever read.

There is a very naked truth in this novel and it will grind you hard. I'd call it catharsis.

Read this. It's an exploration.

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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
I have just about finished reading this book for the 2nd time. I read it about a year ago and it has stayed in my memory so much I had to read it again. The book transports you to the cold and icy Newfoundland where Quoyle finds himself after leaving the tragedy of his 'other' life behind, and doesn't let you forget it even after the final word has been read. And whilst the book is not full of laughs or semtimentality, still through the bleakness and the melancholy is a feeling of hope, of identifying with Quoyle and to some extent with the other characters like the Aunt, Wavey Prowse and even Bunny and Sunshine Quoyle. I found putting the book down extremely difficult, thinking 'just another page'. Proulx drew me into the knot of Quoyle's life and emotions, and I felt more that I was watching events rather than reading about them. I would recommend this truly amazing, touching and thought-provoking book to anyone.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
A BIT OF A YAWN
I have to admit that this book defeated me: I got half way and decided not to finish it. It was boring and moved at a snail's pace. Read more
Published 16 hours ago by Rocke Harder
A gem
This is a gem of a book and I was so sorry when it came to end. Essentially, it is the story of a somewhat hapless large and overweight man in his late thirties with two daughters... Read more
Published 2 months ago by lesharris
Read the reviews but give it a go
From the reviews so far it seems that this book is either deeply loved or loathed - there are no half way opinions. Read more
Published 2 months ago by James L. Munro
The snoring news
Having recently finished this book I can't spend much time reviewing it as I feel I have wasted too much time reading it. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Damien Robins
A Modern Classic
The Shipping News is possibly one of the best modern books I have ever read. Proulx uses a similar peotic language to that of John Steinbeck, speaking to you both casually but with... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Ben Earle
Excellent service, thanks
I have borrowed this book from the local library several times and decided I just had to have a copy for myself. Read more
Published 4 months ago by R. Mcdonald
Made me want to visit Newfoundland
There is something wonderfully peaceful about this novel, despite the fact it often deals with difficult issues and unhappy characters. Read more
Published 10 months ago by KeenAsRadioactivity
A Light Novel with a Dark One Trying to Get Out
The central character of "The Shipping News" is Quoyle- we never learn his Christian name-, a thirty-something journalist with a local newspaper in upstate New York. Read more
Published 10 months ago by J C E Hitchcock
Disappointing....
This was a book I had been meaning to read for a while as it is a book which often crops uop in recommendations on here and for me and looked quite interesting. Read more
Published 12 months ago by K. Doig
Annie Proulx - The Shipping News
This book starts of with our main man Quoyle living in New York with two young daughter's and a cheating wife who doesnt love him, Quoyle's unhappy with his one way love to this... Read more
Published 14 months ago by molko
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