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.
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