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Between Sanity and Madness: Mental Illness from Ancient Greece to the Neuroscientific Era

Autor Allan V. Horwitz
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 ian 2020
Between Sanity and Madness: Mental Illness from Ancient Greece to the Neuroscientific Era examines several perennial issues about mental illness: how different societies have distinguished mental disorders from normality; whether mental illnesses are similar to or different from organic conditions; and the ways in which different eras conceive of the causes of mental disorder. It begins with the earliest depictions of mental illness in Ancient Greek literature, philosophy, and medicine and concludes with the portrayals found in modern neuroscience. In contrast to the tremendous advances other branches of medicine display in answering questions about the nature, causes, and treatments of physical diseases, current psychiatric knowledge about what qualities of madness distinguish it from sanity, the resemblance of mental and physical pathologies, and the kinds of factors that lead people to become mentally ill does not show any steady growth or, arguably, much progress. The immense recent technological advances in brain science have not yet led to corresponding improvements in understandings of and explanations for mental illnesses. These perplexing phenomena remain almost as mysterious now as they were millennia ago.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780190907860
ISBN-10: 019090786X
Pagini: 380
Dimensiuni: 163 x 236 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Between Sanity and Madness offers a sweeping account of psychiatry's history and its current controversies that is at once sophisticated and accessible. Readers will especially benefit from Horwitz's unparalleled expertise and unique perspective on the advantages and limitations of psychiatry's embrace of the DSM, here astutely and engagingly analyzed. The story of psychiatry's turn to biology is by now well known; Horwitz shows us that the turn to DSM-based "diagnostic psychiatry" has been just as consequential and problematic for the discipline.
What is madness? How about mental illness? Different times and places have given enormously different answers. Allan Horwitz is among the most readable of historians of psychiatry. His deeply researched and totally arresting book explores these questions - and shows how far off track we have drifted.
Horwitz demonstrates just how recalcitrant mental illness has been to historical, cross-cultural, and contemporary diagnostic systems, including those of American psychiatry today. That impressive resistance to psychological, social and biological explanations does not mean that the psychiatric treatment of the mentally ill has not improved, only that we are still in an era of uncertainty and limited knowledge which should make us humble and honest about how far we still have to go to have an adequate theory of mental illness. A balanced, easy to read, and useful book.

Notă biografică

Allan V. Horwitz is Board of Governors Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Department of Sociology at Rutgers University. He has published over 100 articles and chapters about various aspects of mental health and illness as well as nine books, including Creating Mental Illness (University of Chicago Press 2002), The Loss of Sadness: How Psychiatry Transformed Normal Misery into Depressive Disorder (Oxford University Press 2007 with Jerome Wakefield), All We Have to Fear (Oxford University Press 2012 with Jerome Wakefield), A Short History of Anxiety (Johns Hopkins University Press 2013), and PTSD: A Short History (Johns Hopkins University Press 2018). In 2006, he received the Leonard Pearlin Award for Distinguished Lifetime Contributions to the Sociology of Mental Health and in 2016 the Leo G. Reeder Award for Lifetime Contributions to Medical Sociology, both from the American Sociological Association. He has been a Fellow-in-Residence at the Netherlands Institute forAdvanced Study (2007-2008) and at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford (2012-2013).