The reality of mental illness

Bibliographic Information

The reality of mental illness

Martin Roth & Jerome Kroll

Cambridge University Press, 1986

  • pbk.

Available at  / 7 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 115-128

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book is psychiatry's reply to the diverse group of antipsychiatrists, including Laing, Foucault, Goffman, Szasz and Bassaglia, that has made fashionable the view that mental illness is merely socially deviant behaviour and that psychiatrists are agents of the capitalist society seeking to repress such behaviour. It establishes, by the use of evidence from historical and transcultural studies, that mental illness has been recognized in all cultures since the beginning of history and goes on to explore the philosophical and medical basis for psychiatry's diagnosis and treatment of mental illness. Finally, it tackles two issues where psychiatry has been seen as at odds with the values prevailing in society: involuntary hospitalization and the insanity defence. The Reality of Mental Illness does not pretend to offer simple answers to the complex problems it discusses, but will leave the reader with a much greater understanding of psychiatry's aims, practices and problems.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • 1. Mental illness, psychiatry and its critics
  • 2. Disorders of the mind and the role of medicine in historical perspective
  • 3. The evidence from transcultural enquiries
  • 4. A consideration of the mind-body problem and its bearing on the concept of disease
  • 5. Medical and alternative models of mental disease
  • 6. Social, ethical and philosophical aspects of involuntary hospitalization and the insanity defence
  • Notes.

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