Controversies and Dilemmas in Contemporary Psychiatry

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Transaction Publishers, Dec 31, 2011 - Psychology - 331 pages
The controversies and dilemmas in contemporary psychiatry are so numerous and serious that they, to a great extent, define psychiatry. Yet most psychiatrists pay little attention to the field’s controversies, maintaining that talking about controversies tarnishes psychiatry’s reputation and them along with it. Critics of psychiatry use these controversies and dilemmas, along with psychiatrists’ unwillingness to discuss them, to undermine psychiatry. They question the existence of mental disorder and the purpose of psychiatric therapy. Kecmanovic undertakes a major effort of resolving with science, not ideology, such dilemmas. Although psychiatrists give no thought to the mind-body relationship, their attitude towards this relationship determines their approach to the mentally ill, their understanding of the origin and nature of the mental disorder, and the therapy they think has priority. Sometimes psychiatrists implicitly or explicitly cite a specific school of philosophy in order to find conceptual support for their particular practice. As a result psychiatrists do not speak the same language about the same issues. Kecmanovic suggests that there can be no dialogue without common language; opposing views cannot converge without dialogue. The behavior of the mentally ill is socially jarring. This is a major reason why the mentally ill are considered to be a menace. They threaten prevailing manners of communicating, expressing one’s thoughts and feelings, and the existing meaning of symbols in a given environment. Deviance of a person with a mental disorder is specific; socially perceived as incomprehensible, irrational, and unpredictable. What is common to all reactions to the disruptive nature of a mental disorder is the desire to be protected from those with illness; in other words, to put them under control and supervision.
 

Contents

Towards a Definition of Mental Disorder
1
From Normality to Mental Health
109
Should They Be Differentiated?
169
Conceptual Cacophony in Psychiatry
231
Ending and Beginning
271

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About the author (2011)

Dusan Kecmanovic is former professor of psychiatry and political psychology at Sarajevo University, and now is a private psychiatrist in Sydney, Australia. He has written numerous pieces in the fields of social psychiatry, social pathology, and the psychology of ethnonationalism. He is the author of Ethnic Times: Exploring Ethnonationalism in the Former Yugoslavia and The Mass Psychology of Ethnonationalism.  

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