Katie Rose Guest Pryal, is an author, neurodiversity expert, and adjunct professor of law at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is the author of Life of the Mind Interrupted: Essays on Mental Health and Disability in Higher Education and the award-winning Even If You're Broken: Bodies, Boundaries, and Mental Health.
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Description
Preface Introduction: How to Talk about Mental Disability Part I. The Mental Health Crisis in Higher Education 1. Anxiety in Academia 2. Population Shock Events 3. Systemic Burnout 4. Toxic Academic Overwork 5. Setting Boundaries 6. The Disabled Mind in Academia 7. Writing Publicly about Mental Disability 8. Writing Depression Part II. Teaching with Mental Health in Mind 9. "The Darkness That Is Plaguing Our University" 10. Rigor Angst 11. Toxic Rigor Is Ableist 12. Teaching Mentally Disabled Students 13. Front-Line Faculty 14. Procrastination and Compassion 15. Teaching Accessibly/Inclusively Acknowledgments Bibliography
"In A Light in the Tower, Pryal's discussion of the darkness of mental distress is riveting. The recommendations for teaching are very helpful, and I'll be using them in my courses. I really appreciated the chapter on public writing as well. Public writing is an important outlet for faculty to apply their knowledge to the wider community, but many don't know how to go about doing this. Thank you for this honest, practical, and reflective book."-Teresa Heinz Housel, editor of Mental Health among Higher Education Faculty, Administrators, and Graduate Students "A Light in the Tower brilliantly confronts the stigma against mental disability that haunts academia. With engaging prose, Pryal gives the academic community tools to deal with mental health crises and to build a more inclusive, healthier environment in academia for all people-students and faculty-living with mental disability and experiencing mental distress. An essential, game-changing book."-Elizabeth Donaldson, editor of Literatures of Madness: Disability Studies and Mental Healthand series editor of Literary Disability Studies

