Description

Book Synopsis
Our everyday lives are increasingly intertwined with psychiatry and discussions of mental health. Yet the dominant medical discipline of psychiatry remains surrounded by controversy. Is mental distress really an illness like any other, treatable by drugs? Can psychiatrists differentiate between mental disorders normal eccentricities, anxieties or even sadness? Should the power of psychiatrists be challenged by the knowledge of those with lived experience of mental ill health? In this penetrating analysis, Nikolas Rose critiques the powerful part that psychiatry has come to play in the lives of so many across the world. A series of chapters, each tackling an area of dispute head on, opens wide the terrain of debate addressing issues such as advances in brain science, the politics of Western psychiatry's spread across the globe, and recent evidence of social adversity's role in producing mental ill health. The answers we find to these pressing questions will shape the psychiatric futures that are being brought into existence. Ultimately, this book proposes a radically different future, no less evidence-based or rigorous, and indeed far more attuned to the realities of mental health, and argues that, as a branch of social medicine, another psychiatry is possible.

Trade Review

"Nikolas Rose brings a remarkable wealth of scholarship and experience to seriously difficult questions about mental health - and his inspiring answers suggest original and enlightening solutions. Rose's brilliant analyses provide stunning revelations about practical ways mental distress can be alleviated. Everyone with any stake in psychiatry and mental health should read this book."
Emily Martin, New York University

"In another landmark volume, Rose presents the culmination of decades of critical questioning about the reach of psychiatry's long arms into all our lives, whether we live with mental distress or not. His 'Seven Hard Questions' are ones we need to keep asking."
Sarah Carr, University of Birmingham

"If you want a scholarly and thought-provoking critique of current psychiatry, then this is the book for you."
Tom Burns, Times Higher Education Supplement

"Even-handed, meticulously researched, offering a wealth of historical detail explaining how psychiatry has got to where it is today."
The Psychologist

"Rose's writing is logical and straightforward, and he is able to convey complex arguments and nebulous ideas in a way that will be clear to most readers."
Journal of Mental Health



Table of Contents

Chapter One: What is psychiatry?

Our psychiatric lives

Everyone’s little helpers

Many psychiatries

Psychiatry defines the boundaries

What mental disorder is

Psychiatry as a political science

The politics of psychiatry

Critical psychiatry today

OnwardsÉ

Chapter Two: Is there really an ‘epidemic’ of mental disorder?

‘The burden of brain disorders’

Counting the costs

Burden today

From ‘mental’ disorders to ‘brain disorders’

So is there an ‘epidemic’?

Chapter Three: Is it all the fault of neoliberal capitalism?

Our unhappy present

The factory of unhappiness

Social capital

Loneliness

Stress

So is it all the fault of neoliberal capitalism?

Chapter Four: If mental disorders exist, how shall we know them?

Diagnosis as a social phenomenon

Solution One: Define the phenotype

Solution Two: Find the biomarker

Solution Three: Straight to the brain

Solution Four: Beyond diagnosis

From diagnosis to formulation

Chapter Five: Are mental disorders ‘brain disorders’?

Proven by psychopharmaceuticals?

Discovered in the genes?

Visible in the brain images?

So are mental disorders brain disorders?

Chapter Six: Does psychopharmacology have a future?

How did we get here?

The drugs don’t do nothing, but

The pipeline is empty!

Beyond psychopharmacology?

Chapter Seven: Who needs global mental health?

Grand challenge: no health without mental health?

The debate

Beyond the conflict?

All our futures?

Chapter Eight: Experts by experience?

Mental patient movements

From ‘on our own’ to ‘nothing about us without us’

The politics of recovery

A new epistemology of mental distress

Have we moved beyond the monologue?

Chapter Nine: Is another psychiatry possible?

Manifestoes for the future

Seven answers to seven hard questions

Another psychiatry, another biopolitics

Our Psychiatric Future

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    A Hardback by Nikolas Rose

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      View other formats and editions of Our Psychiatric Future by Nikolas Rose

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 05/10/2018
      ISBN13: 9780745689111, 978-0745689111
      ISBN10: 0745689116

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Our everyday lives are increasingly intertwined with psychiatry and discussions of mental health. Yet the dominant medical discipline of psychiatry remains surrounded by controversy. Is mental distress really an illness like any other, treatable by drugs? Can psychiatrists differentiate between mental disorders normal eccentricities, anxieties or even sadness? Should the power of psychiatrists be challenged by the knowledge of those with lived experience of mental ill health? In this penetrating analysis, Nikolas Rose critiques the powerful part that psychiatry has come to play in the lives of so many across the world. A series of chapters, each tackling an area of dispute head on, opens wide the terrain of debate addressing issues such as advances in brain science, the politics of Western psychiatry's spread across the globe, and recent evidence of social adversity's role in producing mental ill health. The answers we find to these pressing questions will shape the psychiatric futures that are being brought into existence. Ultimately, this book proposes a radically different future, no less evidence-based or rigorous, and indeed far more attuned to the realities of mental health, and argues that, as a branch of social medicine, another psychiatry is possible.

      Trade Review

      "Nikolas Rose brings a remarkable wealth of scholarship and experience to seriously difficult questions about mental health - and his inspiring answers suggest original and enlightening solutions. Rose's brilliant analyses provide stunning revelations about practical ways mental distress can be alleviated. Everyone with any stake in psychiatry and mental health should read this book."
      Emily Martin, New York University

      "In another landmark volume, Rose presents the culmination of decades of critical questioning about the reach of psychiatry's long arms into all our lives, whether we live with mental distress or not. His 'Seven Hard Questions' are ones we need to keep asking."
      Sarah Carr, University of Birmingham

      "If you want a scholarly and thought-provoking critique of current psychiatry, then this is the book for you."
      Tom Burns, Times Higher Education Supplement

      "Even-handed, meticulously researched, offering a wealth of historical detail explaining how psychiatry has got to where it is today."
      The Psychologist

      "Rose's writing is logical and straightforward, and he is able to convey complex arguments and nebulous ideas in a way that will be clear to most readers."
      Journal of Mental Health



      Table of Contents

      Chapter One: What is psychiatry?

      Our psychiatric lives

      Everyone’s little helpers

      Many psychiatries

      Psychiatry defines the boundaries

      What mental disorder is

      Psychiatry as a political science

      The politics of psychiatry

      Critical psychiatry today

      OnwardsÉ

      Chapter Two: Is there really an ‘epidemic’ of mental disorder?

      ‘The burden of brain disorders’

      Counting the costs

      Burden today

      From ‘mental’ disorders to ‘brain disorders’

      So is there an ‘epidemic’?

      Chapter Three: Is it all the fault of neoliberal capitalism?

      Our unhappy present

      The factory of unhappiness

      Social capital

      Loneliness

      Stress

      So is it all the fault of neoliberal capitalism?

      Chapter Four: If mental disorders exist, how shall we know them?

      Diagnosis as a social phenomenon

      Solution One: Define the phenotype

      Solution Two: Find the biomarker

      Solution Three: Straight to the brain

      Solution Four: Beyond diagnosis

      From diagnosis to formulation

      Chapter Five: Are mental disorders ‘brain disorders’?

      Proven by psychopharmaceuticals?

      Discovered in the genes?

      Visible in the brain images?

      So are mental disorders brain disorders?

      Chapter Six: Does psychopharmacology have a future?

      How did we get here?

      The drugs don’t do nothing, but

      The pipeline is empty!

      Beyond psychopharmacology?

      Chapter Seven: Who needs global mental health?

      Grand challenge: no health without mental health?

      The debate

      Beyond the conflict?

      All our futures?

      Chapter Eight: Experts by experience?

      Mental patient movements

      From ‘on our own’ to ‘nothing about us without us’

      The politics of recovery

      A new epistemology of mental distress

      Have we moved beyond the monologue?

      Chapter Nine: Is another psychiatry possible?

      Manifestoes for the future

      Seven answers to seven hard questions

      Another psychiatry, another biopolitics

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