Understanding the history of psychiatry requires an accurate
view of its function and purpose. In this provocative new study,
Szasz challenges conventional beliefs about psychiatry. He asserts
that, in fact, psychiatrists are not concerned with the diagnosis
and treatment of bona fide illnesses. Psychiatric tradition, social
expectation, and the law make it clear that coercion is the
profession's determining characteristic.
Psychiatrists may "diagnose" or "treat" people without their
consent or even against their clearly expressed wishes, and these
involuntary psychiatric interventions are as different as are
sexual relations between consenting adults and the sexual violence
we call "rape." But the point is not merely the difference between
coerced and consensual psychiatry, but to contrast them. The term
"psychiatry" ought to be applied to one or the other, but not both.
As long as psychiatrists and society refuse to recognize this,
there can be no real psychiatric historiography.
The coercive character of psychiatry was more apparent in the
past than it is now. Then, insanity was synonymous with unfitness
for liberty. Toward the end of the nineteenth century, a new type
of psychiatric relationship developed, when people experiencing
so-called "nervous symptoms," sought help. This led to a
distinction between two kinds of mental diseases: neuroses and
psychoses. Persons who complained about their own behavior were
classified as neurotic, whereas persons about whose behavior others
complained were classified as psychotic. The legal, medical,
psychiatric, and social denial of this simple distinction and its
far-reaching implications undergirds the house of cards that is
modern psychiatry. Coercion as Cure is the most important book by
Szasz since his landmark The Myth of Mental Illness.
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