Library:Psychiatric Hegemony: A Marxist Theory of Mental Illness: Difference between revisions

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(Added list of abbreviations.)
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| '''Index''' || 225
| '''Index''' || 225
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{{Library work|title=Psychiatric Hegemony: A Marxist Theory of Mental Illness|written by=Bruce M. Z. Cohen|written in=2016|published=Palgrave Macmillian UK|source=}}
=Dedication=
<center><i>This book is dedicated to three critical sociologists who continue to inspire:
Stanley Cohen (1942–2013)
Stuart Hall (1932–2014)
Jock Young (1942–2013)
&
An old friend and revolutionary footballer:
Hafty (d. 2014)
Es geht voran!</i></center>
=Preface=
This book exists for two main reasons. First, to fill a gap in the
current sociology of mental health scholarship. This omission was
brought to my attention by my postgraduate students; though I was
initially very sceptical of their research capabilities, it turned out
that they were basically cor- rect. Granted, there are bits and pieces
of Marxist analysis out there, but compared with the other mainstream
areas of sociological investigation such as education, youth, crime,
and the family, the use of the big man’s work to make sense of the
continuing power of the mental health system is nearly
non-existent. Second, this book offers a radical challenge to the
conservative and theory-free scholarship which is currently infecting
my area of sociology. I believe we need to bring critical scholarship
back to the heart of the sociology of mental health; we desperately
need to have the theoretical as well as the empirical debates.
The book title may suggest radical polemic, but at the same time, I
think the argument is relatively simple and straightforward, and also, I
think there is plenty of evidence to support it. Under capitalism, we live
in a society of fundamental inequalities defined by our relation to the
means of economic production. Public or private, every institution in
capitalist society is framed by these same power disparities. The dominant
understandings of who we are, what is expected of us, and the limits of
our behaviour are constructed and defined by the capitalist class, then
reproduced through the state and institutions of civil society (e.g., the systems of education, criminal justice, and health). This is necessary for
the progression and survival of capitalism. For example, we are socialised
by the family, the school, and the mass media to accept social and eco-
nomic disparities as natural and common sense; as the inevitable result of
differential talent and competition within the marketplace, rather than
class privilege and the exploitation of the majority of the population. In
this respect, the mental health system is no exception. Led by the insti-
tution of psychiatry as the ultimate experts on the mind, mental health
professionals are far from immune to the needs of capital. In fact, I will
demonstrate in this book that the mental health system has been impres-
sively compliant to the wishes of the ruling classes and, for that reason,
has gained more power, authority, and professional jurisdiction as indus-
trial society has developed.
While this book is centrally a theoretical interrogation of psychiat-
ric discourse and professional power, I have also attempted to make it
accessible to practitioners and non-theoreticians. I think theory is vitally
important to achieving a broader understanding of human existence
within this world, but I appreciate that many put more faith in the “prac-
tical solution,” in being “pragmatic,” and in changing the world through
“doing.” I think mental health practitioners—and I have met plenty
over the years—are particularly prone to this view. For this reason, there
are four substantive chapters in the book (on the issues of work, youth,
women, and political protest) which are written with the pragmatists in
mind. These apply Marxist ideas to specific issues within the field and
highlight the many dangers of simply “doing” mental health work with-
out any thought to the wider structures in which they carry out such
activities. Often performed by professionals who similarly believed that
they were “acting in the best interests of the patient,” the history of psy-
chiatry and its allies is littered with too many acts of violence, torture,
and death to be able to write them off as aberrations or exceptions in a
“progressive” and “scientific” system of health care. It can instead be seen
as a regular service performed by the mental health system in support of
the ruling elites.
What follows is my version of a Marxist theory of mental illness.
It is only one contribution within the sociology of mental health, but
nevertheless, I hope it inspires others to follow my analysis in equally
challenging and critical directions. And if you want to continue the dis-
cussion, you can email me at b.cohen@auckland.ac.nz or @BmzCohen
on twitter.
=Acknowledgements=
This book could not have happened without the emphatic support of
Palgrave Macmillan; I am eternally grateful for their faith and trust in
this project. In particular I would like to thank my Editors, Nicola Jones
and Sharla Plant, as well as the ever-helpful Assistant Editors, Eleanor
Christie, Laura Aldridge and Cecilia Ghidotti. The idea for the book
originated from my postgraduate “Sociology of Mental Health” class. I
thank all of the students that I have had the pleasure to teach on that
course over the years, in particular Dhakshi Gamage (a student who articulated the specific connection between neoliberal values and the construction of shyness as a mental disorder long before I did). In 2015 I had
the chance to meet with a number of international colleagues working on
critical issues in mental health and I would like to thank them all for their
kind words of support and advice. They include Suman Fernando, China
Mills, and Peter Morrall. My good friend Jeff Masson has become something of a mentor, what a guy! I would like to thank both him and his
family for being such warm and generous people on the many occasions
that we have visited them and outstayed our welcome. The Department
of Sociology at the University of Auckland continues to be the home of
a vibrant crowd of collegial people who understand how important it is
to have the time and resources to complete a major research project like
this one—many thanks to you all. Of particular note, hello to my friend
and colleague Colin Cremin, with whom I have shared some really useful conversations on the slippery subject of academic writing. And he lets
me win when we play PES 2016, result! Thanks also to Helen Sword for
the conversation on the ferry about scholarly writing and her very useful
book Stylish Academic Writing (I tried, Helen!). This would be an appropriate point to add that all the ideas and attempts at style in this book are
my fault alone. My thanks and appreciation to the Faculty of Arts, who
approved my research and study leave in 2015; this allowed me to complete most of the writing for the book. The Faculty also funded a summer
scholar, Rearna Hartmann, for three months (from November 2014 to
February 2015) to undertake some additional analysis of each edition
of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. This work
appears in Chaps. 3–7 of the book. Rearna should get a special mention
here as she proved to be such an incredibly talented and efficient scholar-in-training; it was a real pleasure to work with you on this project.
For inspiration, support, and temporary escape from the book writing, I would like to thank my football team, Tripzville/University-Mt
Wellington (the 2015 Division Three (Seniors) Over-35s champions!),
especially the boss, Mark Rossi, and my left-back partner in the crime,
Tony Westmoreland. The music from the Killers kept me reasonably
buoyant throughout the writing phase. Thanks also to friends and family
in England, Germany, Australia, and New Zealand for all the good times,
including the constant flow of alcohol, much needed. Maeby and Milo
constantly interrupted my writing to show me wildlife they had “found”
in the garden; on reflection, probably useful exercise for me. Finally, from
the east to the west, the north to the south, she is the love of my life and
the brains of the operation, Dr Jessica Terruhn—thanks for all the feedback on the drafts and, you know, everything else. I love you, honey!
=Contents=
{| style="margin: 0 auto; float: center;"
| '''1 Introduction: Thinking Critically About Mental Illness''' || 1
|-
| '''2 Marxist Theory and Mental Illness: A Critique of Political Economy''' || 27
|-
| '''3 Psychiatric Hegemony: Mental Illness in Neoliberal Society''' || 69
|-
| '''4 Work: Enforcing Compliance''' || 97
|-
| '''5 Youth: Medicalising Deviance''' || 113
|-
| '''6 Women: Reproducing Patriarchal Relations''' || 139
|-
| '''7 Resistance: Pathologising Dissent''' || 169
|-
| '''8 Conclusion: Challenging the Psychiatric Hegemon''' || 205
|-
| '''Appendix A: Methodology for Textual Analysis of the DSMs''' || 213
|-
| '''Appendix B: Youth-Related Diagnostic Categories in the DSM, 1952–2013''' || 215
|-
| '''Appendix C: “Feminised” Diagnostic Categories in the DSM, 1952–2013''' || 221
|-
| '''Index''' || 225
|}
[[Category:Library works]]
=List of Abbreviations=
:{|
| ADD || Attention Deficit Disorder
|-
| ADHD || Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
|-
| APA || American Psychiatric Association*
|-
| APD || Antisocial Personality Disorder
|-
| BPD || Borderline Personality Disorder
|-
| CTO || Community Treatment Order
|-
| DSM || Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
|-
| ECT || Electroconvulsive Therapy
|-
| EL || Encephalitis Lethargica
|-
| FDA || Food and Drug Administration
|-
| GD || Gender Dysphoria
|-
| GID || Gender Identity Disorder
|-
| HPD || Histrionic Personality Disorder
|-
| ISA || Ideological State Apparatus
|-
| LLPDD || Late Luteal Phase Dysphoric Disorder
|-
| NIMH || National Institute of Mental Health
|-
| OSDD || Other Specified Dissociative Disorder
|-
| PENS || Psychological Ethics and National Security
|-
| PMDD || Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder
|-
| PMS || Premenstrual Syndrome
|-
| PMT || Premenstrual Tension
|-
| PTSD || Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
|-
| xvi || List of Abbreviations
|-
| SAD || Social Anxiety Disorder
|-
| SSRI || Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors
|-
| UK || United Kingdom
|-
| US || United States
|-
| WHO || World Health Organization
|-
| || (*to distinguish the American Psychiatric Association from
the American Psychological Association, the full name for the
latter is always given in the text)
|}
|}


[[Category:Library works]]
[[Category:Library works]]

Revision as of 11:36, 4 September 2022

Psychiatric Hegemony: A Marxist Theory of Mental Illness
Written in2016
First publishedPalgrave Macmillian UK

Dedication

This book is dedicated to three critical sociologists who continue to inspire:

Stanley Cohen (1942–2013)

Stuart Hall (1932–2014)

Jock Young (1942–2013)

&

An old friend and revolutionary footballer: Hafty (d. 2014)

Es geht voran!

Preface

This book exists for two main reasons. First, to fill a gap in the current sociology of mental health scholarship. This omission was brought to my attention by my postgraduate students; though I was initially very sceptical of their research capabilities, it turned out that they were basically cor- rect. Granted, there are bits and pieces of Marxist analysis out there, but compared with the other mainstream areas of sociological investigation such as education, youth, crime, and the family, the use of the big man’s work to make sense of the continuing power of the mental health system is nearly non-existent. Second, this book offers a radical challenge to the conservative and theory-free scholarship which is currently infecting my area of sociology. I believe we need to bring critical scholarship back to the heart of the sociology of mental health; we desperately need to have the theoretical as well as the empirical debates.

The book title may suggest radical polemic, but at the same time, I think the argument is relatively simple and straightforward, and also, I think there is plenty of evidence to support it. Under capitalism, we live in a society of fundamental inequalities defined by our relation to the means of economic production. Public or private, every institution in capitalist society is framed by these same power disparities. The dominant understandings of who we are, what is expected of us, and the limits of our behaviour are constructed and defined by the capitalist class, then reproduced through the state and institutions of civil society (e.g., the systems of education, criminal justice, and health). This is necessary for the progression and survival of capitalism. For example, we are socialised by the family, the school, and the mass media to accept social and eco- nomic disparities as natural and common sense; as the inevitable result of differential talent and competition within the marketplace, rather than class privilege and the exploitation of the majority of the population. In this respect, the mental health system is no exception. Led by the insti- tution of psychiatry as the ultimate experts on the mind, mental health professionals are far from immune to the needs of capital. In fact, I will demonstrate in this book that the mental health system has been impres- sively compliant to the wishes of the ruling classes and, for that reason, has gained more power, authority, and professional jurisdiction as indus- trial society has developed. While this book is centrally a theoretical interrogation of psychiat- ric discourse and professional power, I have also attempted to make it accessible to practitioners and non-theoreticians. I think theory is vitally important to achieving a broader understanding of human existence within this world, but I appreciate that many put more faith in the “prac- tical solution,” in being “pragmatic,” and in changing the world through “doing.” I think mental health practitioners—and I have met plenty over the years—are particularly prone to this view. For this reason, there are four substantive chapters in the book (on the issues of work, youth, women, and political protest) which are written with the pragmatists in mind. These apply Marxist ideas to specific issues within the field and highlight the many dangers of simply “doing” mental health work with- out any thought to the wider structures in which they carry out such activities. Often performed by professionals who similarly believed that they were “acting in the best interests of the patient,” the history of psy- chiatry and its allies is littered with too many acts of violence, torture, and death to be able to write them off as aberrations or exceptions in a “progressive” and “scientific” system of health care. It can instead be seen as a regular service performed by the mental health system in support of the ruling elites.

What follows is my version of a Marxist theory of mental illness. It is only one contribution within the sociology of mental health, but nevertheless, I hope it inspires others to follow my analysis in equally challenging and critical directions. And if you want to continue the dis- cussion, you can email me at b.cohen@auckland.ac.nz or @BmzCohen on twitter.

Acknowledgements

This book could not have happened without the emphatic support of Palgrave Macmillan; I am eternally grateful for their faith and trust in this project. In particular I would like to thank my Editors, Nicola Jones and Sharla Plant, as well as the ever-helpful Assistant Editors, Eleanor Christie, Laura Aldridge and Cecilia Ghidotti. The idea for the book originated from my postgraduate “Sociology of Mental Health” class. I thank all of the students that I have had the pleasure to teach on that course over the years, in particular Dhakshi Gamage (a student who articulated the specific connection between neoliberal values and the construction of shyness as a mental disorder long before I did). In 2015 I had the chance to meet with a number of international colleagues working on critical issues in mental health and I would like to thank them all for their kind words of support and advice. They include Suman Fernando, China Mills, and Peter Morrall. My good friend Jeff Masson has become something of a mentor, what a guy! I would like to thank both him and his family for being such warm and generous people on the many occasions that we have visited them and outstayed our welcome. The Department of Sociology at the University of Auckland continues to be the home of a vibrant crowd of collegial people who understand how important it is to have the time and resources to complete a major research project like this one—many thanks to you all. Of particular note, hello to my friend and colleague Colin Cremin, with whom I have shared some really useful conversations on the slippery subject of academic writing. And he lets me win when we play PES 2016, result! Thanks also to Helen Sword for the conversation on the ferry about scholarly writing and her very useful book Stylish Academic Writing (I tried, Helen!). This would be an appropriate point to add that all the ideas and attempts at style in this book are my fault alone. My thanks and appreciation to the Faculty of Arts, who approved my research and study leave in 2015; this allowed me to complete most of the writing for the book. The Faculty also funded a summer scholar, Rearna Hartmann, for three months (from November 2014 to February 2015) to undertake some additional analysis of each edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. This work appears in Chaps. 3–7 of the book. Rearna should get a special mention here as she proved to be such an incredibly talented and efficient scholar-in-training; it was a real pleasure to work with you on this project.

For inspiration, support, and temporary escape from the book writing, I would like to thank my football team, Tripzville/University-Mt Wellington (the 2015 Division Three (Seniors) Over-35s champions!), especially the boss, Mark Rossi, and my left-back partner in the crime, Tony Westmoreland. The music from the Killers kept me reasonably buoyant throughout the writing phase. Thanks also to friends and family in England, Germany, Australia, and New Zealand for all the good times, including the constant flow of alcohol, much needed. Maeby and Milo constantly interrupted my writing to show me wildlife they had “found” in the garden; on reflection, probably useful exercise for me. Finally, from the east to the west, the north to the south, she is the love of my life and the brains of the operation, Dr Jessica Terruhn—thanks for all the feedback on the drafts and, you know, everything else. I love you, honey!

Contents

1 Introduction: Thinking Critically About Mental Illness 1
2 Marxist Theory and Mental Illness: A Critique of Political Economy 27
3 Psychiatric Hegemony: Mental Illness in Neoliberal Society 69
4 Work: Enforcing Compliance 97
5 Youth: Medicalising Deviance 113
6 Women: Reproducing Patriarchal Relations 139
7 Resistance: Pathologising Dissent 169
8 Conclusion: Challenging the Psychiatric Hegemon 205
Appendix A: Methodology for Textual Analysis of the DSMs 213
Appendix B: Youth-Related Diagnostic Categories in the DSM, 1952–2013 215
Appendix C: “Feminised” Diagnostic Categories in the DSM, 1952–2013 221
Index 225


Psychiatric Hegemony: A Marxist Theory of Mental Illness
Written in2016
First publishedPalgrave Macmillian UK

Dedication

This book is dedicated to three critical sociologists who continue to inspire:

Stanley Cohen (1942–2013)

Stuart Hall (1932–2014)

Jock Young (1942–2013)

&

An old friend and revolutionary footballer: Hafty (d. 2014)

Es geht voran!

Preface

This book exists for two main reasons. First, to fill a gap in the current sociology of mental health scholarship. This omission was brought to my attention by my postgraduate students; though I was initially very sceptical of their research capabilities, it turned out that they were basically cor- rect. Granted, there are bits and pieces of Marxist analysis out there, but compared with the other mainstream areas of sociological investigation such as education, youth, crime, and the family, the use of the big man’s work to make sense of the continuing power of the mental health system is nearly non-existent. Second, this book offers a radical challenge to the conservative and theory-free scholarship which is currently infecting my area of sociology. I believe we need to bring critical scholarship back to the heart of the sociology of mental health; we desperately need to have the theoretical as well as the empirical debates.

The book title may suggest radical polemic, but at the same time, I think the argument is relatively simple and straightforward, and also, I think there is plenty of evidence to support it. Under capitalism, we live in a society of fundamental inequalities defined by our relation to the means of economic production. Public or private, every institution in capitalist society is framed by these same power disparities. The dominant understandings of who we are, what is expected of us, and the limits of our behaviour are constructed and defined by the capitalist class, then reproduced through the state and institutions of civil society (e.g., the systems of education, criminal justice, and health). This is necessary for the progression and survival of capitalism. For example, we are socialised by the family, the school, and the mass media to accept social and eco- nomic disparities as natural and common sense; as the inevitable result of differential talent and competition within the marketplace, rather than class privilege and the exploitation of the majority of the population. In this respect, the mental health system is no exception. Led by the insti- tution of psychiatry as the ultimate experts on the mind, mental health professionals are far from immune to the needs of capital. In fact, I will demonstrate in this book that the mental health system has been impres- sively compliant to the wishes of the ruling classes and, for that reason, has gained more power, authority, and professional jurisdiction as indus- trial society has developed. While this book is centrally a theoretical interrogation of psychiat- ric discourse and professional power, I have also attempted to make it accessible to practitioners and non-theoreticians. I think theory is vitally important to achieving a broader understanding of human existence within this world, but I appreciate that many put more faith in the “prac- tical solution,” in being “pragmatic,” and in changing the world through “doing.” I think mental health practitioners—and I have met plenty over the years—are particularly prone to this view. For this reason, there are four substantive chapters in the book (on the issues of work, youth, women, and political protest) which are written with the pragmatists in mind. These apply Marxist ideas to specific issues within the field and highlight the many dangers of simply “doing” mental health work with- out any thought to the wider structures in which they carry out such activities. Often performed by professionals who similarly believed that they were “acting in the best interests of the patient,” the history of psy- chiatry and its allies is littered with too many acts of violence, torture, and death to be able to write them off as aberrations or exceptions in a “progressive” and “scientific” system of health care. It can instead be seen as a regular service performed by the mental health system in support of the ruling elites.

What follows is my version of a Marxist theory of mental illness. It is only one contribution within the sociology of mental health, but nevertheless, I hope it inspires others to follow my analysis in equally challenging and critical directions. And if you want to continue the dis- cussion, you can email me at b.cohen@auckland.ac.nz or @BmzCohen on twitter.

Acknowledgements

This book could not have happened without the emphatic support of Palgrave Macmillan; I am eternally grateful for their faith and trust in this project. In particular I would like to thank my Editors, Nicola Jones and Sharla Plant, as well as the ever-helpful Assistant Editors, Eleanor Christie, Laura Aldridge and Cecilia Ghidotti. The idea for the book originated from my postgraduate “Sociology of Mental Health” class. I thank all of the students that I have had the pleasure to teach on that course over the years, in particular Dhakshi Gamage (a student who articulated the specific connection between neoliberal values and the construction of shyness as a mental disorder long before I did). In 2015 I had the chance to meet with a number of international colleagues working on critical issues in mental health and I would like to thank them all for their kind words of support and advice. They include Suman Fernando, China Mills, and Peter Morrall. My good friend Jeff Masson has become something of a mentor, what a guy! I would like to thank both him and his family for being such warm and generous people on the many occasions that we have visited them and outstayed our welcome. The Department of Sociology at the University of Auckland continues to be the home of a vibrant crowd of collegial people who understand how important it is to have the time and resources to complete a major research project like this one—many thanks to you all. Of particular note, hello to my friend and colleague Colin Cremin, with whom I have shared some really useful conversations on the slippery subject of academic writing. And he lets me win when we play PES 2016, result! Thanks also to Helen Sword for the conversation on the ferry about scholarly writing and her very useful book Stylish Academic Writing (I tried, Helen!). This would be an appropriate point to add that all the ideas and attempts at style in this book are my fault alone. My thanks and appreciation to the Faculty of Arts, who approved my research and study leave in 2015; this allowed me to complete most of the writing for the book. The Faculty also funded a summer scholar, Rearna Hartmann, for three months (from November 2014 to February 2015) to undertake some additional analysis of each edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. This work appears in Chaps. 3–7 of the book. Rearna should get a special mention here as she proved to be such an incredibly talented and efficient scholar-in-training; it was a real pleasure to work with you on this project.

For inspiration, support, and temporary escape from the book writing, I would like to thank my football team, Tripzville/University-Mt Wellington (the 2015 Division Three (Seniors) Over-35s champions!), especially the boss, Mark Rossi, and my left-back partner in the crime, Tony Westmoreland. The music from the Killers kept me reasonably buoyant throughout the writing phase. Thanks also to friends and family in England, Germany, Australia, and New Zealand for all the good times, including the constant flow of alcohol, much needed. Maeby and Milo constantly interrupted my writing to show me wildlife they had “found” in the garden; on reflection, probably useful exercise for me. Finally, from the east to the west, the north to the south, she is the love of my life and the brains of the operation, Dr Jessica Terruhn—thanks for all the feedback on the drafts and, you know, everything else. I love you, honey!

Contents

1 Introduction: Thinking Critically About Mental Illness 1
2 Marxist Theory and Mental Illness: A Critique of Political Economy 27
3 Psychiatric Hegemony: Mental Illness in Neoliberal Society 69
4 Work: Enforcing Compliance 97
5 Youth: Medicalising Deviance 113
6 Women: Reproducing Patriarchal Relations 139
7 Resistance: Pathologising Dissent 169
8 Conclusion: Challenging the Psychiatric Hegemon 205
Appendix A: Methodology for Textual Analysis of the DSMs 213
Appendix B: Youth-Related Diagnostic Categories in the DSM, 1952–2013 215
Appendix C: “Feminised” Diagnostic Categories in the DSM, 1952–2013 221
Index 225


List of Abbreviations

ADD Attention Deficit Disorder
ADHD Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
APA American Psychiatric Association*
APD Antisocial Personality Disorder
BPD Borderline Personality Disorder
CTO Community Treatment Order
DSM Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
ECT Electroconvulsive Therapy
EL Encephalitis Lethargica
FDA Food and Drug Administration
GD Gender Dysphoria
GID Gender Identity Disorder
HPD Histrionic Personality Disorder
ISA Ideological State Apparatus
LLPDD Late Luteal Phase Dysphoric Disorder
NIMH National Institute of Mental Health
OSDD Other Specified Dissociative Disorder
PENS Psychological Ethics and National Security
PMDD Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder
PMS Premenstrual Syndrome
PMT Premenstrual Tension
PTSD Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
xvi List of Abbreviations
SAD Social Anxiety Disorder
SSRI Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors
UK United Kingdom
US United States
WHO World Health Organization
(*to distinguish the American Psychiatric Association from

the American Psychological Association, the full name for the latter is always given in the text)