“…Advances in neuroscience, psychiatry, clinical psychology, psychopharmacology and digital health technologies all play a significant role in materialising (gendered) knowledge about the complex, invisible and immaterial dimensions of mental or emotional distress in the contemporary moment (Blackman, 2012;Rose & Abi-Rached, 2013;Ussher, 2011). What is curiously missing from public discourse about tackling depression or anxiety are the critical insights of feminist researchers who have long documented the historically situated relationships between women's emotional lives, the politics of mental health diagnosis and various forms of discrimination, inequity and violence (Appignanesi, 2011;Chandler, 2016;McDermott & Roen, 2016;Stone & Kokanovic, 2016;Stoppard, 2000;Ussher, 1991;Wiener, 2005). At stake in these debates is the key issue of how women's experiences of mental health come to be culturally imagined and felt as personal troubles, rather than as "public feelings" that are deeply entwined with historical, sociocultural, economic and political conditions (Cvetkovich, 2012).…”