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Strictly Bipolar
Strictly Bipolar
Nov 17, 2024 12:55 AM

Author:Darian Leader

Strictly Bipolar

Strictly Bipolar is Darian Leader's treatise on the psychological disorder of our times.

If the post-war period was called the 'Age of Anxiety' and the 1980s and '90s the 'Antidepressant Era', we now live in Bipolar times. Mood-stabilising medication is routinely prescribed to adults and children alike, with child prescriptions this decade increasing by 400% and overall diagnoses by 4000%.

What could explain this explosion of bipolarity? Is it a legitimate diagnosis or the result of Big Pharma marketing? Exploring these questions, Darian Leader challenges the rise of 'bipolar' as a catch-all solution to complex problems, and argues that we need to rethink the highs and lows of mania and depression.

What, he asks, do these experiences have to do with love, guilt and rage? Why the spending sprees and the intense feeling of connection with the world? Why the confidence, the self-esteem and the sense of a bright future that can so swiftly turn into despair and dejection?

Only by looking at these questions in a new way will we be able to understand and help the person caught between feelings that can be so terrifying and so exhilarating, so life-affirming yet also so lethal.

Strictly Bipolar is essential reading for anyone interested in contemporary views of the self, bipolarity and a deeper understanding of manic-depression.

Praise for Strictly Bipolar:

'A beautifully thoughtful understanding not just of highs and lows,mania and depression, but of why and how these mechanisms work in our mindsand bodies and how the human subject is coerced todayto embrace a culture of 'bipolarity'' Susie Orbach

'A timely book. Darian Leader's thoughts are more fixated strong-arm interesting, more humane and more persuasive than the profit coercion of the madness industry. Instead of the shoddy reasoning that leads to wrong treatment and over-treatment, he offers illumination and insight; his book is a contribution to a debate, but it could also change lives' Hilary Mantel

Darian Leader is a psychoanalyst practising in London and a member of the Centre for Freudian Analysis and Research and of the College of Psychoanalysts - UK. He is the author of What is Madness?, The New Black, Why do women write more letters than they post?, Promises lovers make when it gets late, Freud's Footnotes and Stealing the Mona Lisa, and co-author, with David Corfield, of Why Do People Get Ill? He is Honorary Visiting Professor in the School of Human and Life Sciences, Roehampton University.

Reviews

A rollicking intellectual adventure yarn of the highest order. . .

—— Tony Stevens, author of STORMING HEAVEN: LSD AND THE AMERICAN DREAM

Truly amazing

—— THE VILLAGE VOICE

A fascinating, thought-provoking look at the leading edge of sports performance, written by a guy who knows the territory. David, besides being a senior writer for Sports Illustrated, was a collegiate runner for Columbia University. More to the point, he’s a terrific researcher and a fine, thoughtful writer

—— Dan Coyle, author of The Talent Code

Full credit to David Epstein, a Sports Illustrated journalist with a serious and deep knowledge of genetics and sports science, for his terrific and unblinking new book, The Sports Gene, a timely corrective to the talent-denial industry

—— Ed Smith , New Statesman

Endlessly fascinating

—— John Harding , Daily Mail

Epstein’s book does not try to simplify the argument, but it does provide a welcome corrective to those who have deliberately underplayed the notion that genetic make-up is irrelevant

—— Mike Atherton , The Times

David Epstein's illuminating synthesis of the latest research into the nature v nurture debate as applied to sport

—— Simon Redfern , Independent

Provoking spirited debate about the merits of the 10,000 hour rule

—— Rick Broadbent , The Times

An important book on the relative roles of genes and environment—nature and nurture—in the building of a professional athlete ... bound to put the cat among the pigeons

—— Wall Street Journal

Captivating...fascinating...His answer to the questions “Nature or nurture?” is both. If that sounds like a hedge, it isn’t: instead, it’s a testament to the author’s close attention to nuance.

—— New York Times

Intelligently, rigorously and politely debunks the "10,000 hours" myth

—— Ed Smith , New Statesman

Perhaps the most fascinating book of the year... Absorbing and full of fascinating detail

—— Chris Maume , Independent

This subtle, enthralling study by the Sports Illustrated writer avoids making excessive claims for genetics

—— Financial Times

David Epstein's The Sports Gene has a discussion that badly needs to happen at all levels in sport; about the relationships between talent, genetics, practice and success in sport

—— Dave MacLeod , Scotsman

Respect is due to Epstein…for injecting some objectivity into the debate with his gripping new tome

—— David Bradford , Cycling Active

The Sports Gene offers a fascinating insight into the topic of nature v nurture…a great read

—— Jason Henderson , Athletics Weekly

A welcome corrective to those who have deliberately underplayed the notion that genetic makeup is relevant

—— Oldie

An illuminating read

—— Sport

Fascinating

—— Rick Broadbent , The Times

Well written and contains important research, and has some wonderful anecdotes

—— Matthew Syed , The Times

The most intriguing sports books of the year, and possibly the best-researched

—— Irish Examiner

An enjoyable mixture of easily digestible science, anecdote and argument

—— Michael Beloff , Times Literary Supplement

This is a book to counter the 10,000-hour rule popularised by Malcolm Gladwell

—— Mark Gallagher , Daily Mail

In a book packed with fascinating anecdotes, it’s hard to pick out highlights … If sport is a passion, The Sports Gene is required reading

—— The Score

Highly entertaining and enlightening

—— Brandon Robshaw , Independent on Sunday

The Sports Gene does not try to simplify the nature vs nurture argument, but it does provide a welcome corrective to those who have underplayed the notion that genetic make-up is relevant

—— The Times

Epstein explores this territory with canny verve

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

Interesting reading

—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald

Dazzling and illuminating

—— Richard Moore , Guardian

Epstein is too respectful of the complexity of his subject matter to leap to any grand conclusions. The book was conceived partially as a rebuttal to glib theorising, and it is all the more fascinating as a result

—— Ken Early , Irish Times

Fascinating from start to finish

—— Amanda Khouv , Women's Fitness

Epstein forces us to rethink the very nature of athleticism

—— GrrlScientist , Guardian

Looks at the science of extraordinary athletic performance.

—— Adam Whitehead , Daily Telegraph

Captivating… Dazzling and illuminating

—— Richard Moore , Guardian

Epstein is not afraid to follow science in “trekking deep into the bramble patches of sensitive topics like gender and race"

—— Choice

Captivating… In a particularly fascinating chapter, Epstein investigates an old theory that purports to explain why Jamaica produces so many Olympic sprinters

—— Christie Ashwanden , Scotsman
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