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Even paranoids have enemies is the reply Golda Meir is said to have
made to Henry Kissinger who, during the 1973 Sinai talks, accused
her of being paranoid for hesitating to grant further concessions
to the Palestinians. It is used as part of the title of this book
to highlight the complex relationship between paranoia and
persecution. The book is divided into three sections: section one
addresses aspects of the complex psychological impact that
experiences of external and internal persecution have on the
individual; section two brings together expositions on paranoid and
persecutory processes in groups, institutions and bureaucracies;
and section three discusses the social, political and cultural
factors which give rise to these processes. The theoretical
viewpoints introduced and discussed come to life in the political,
social and historical arenas where the politics of the Middle East,
the pressures of Japanese society and the dynamics of the drug
scene are used to illustrate and understand the issues involved in
paranoid thinking and in persecution.
'This is the seventh volume in the therapeutic communities series
and a highly informative and reassuring read for anyone interested
in psychodynamic applications, or working with individuals with a
mental illness.' - Therapeutic Communities Journal 'Having no first
hand experience of working with mental illness from a psychodynamic
perspective, I hoped that this book would provide me with an
insight in to the therapeutics of mental illness within a
community. The book certainly accomplished this and more. In
keeping with the "community spirit" I also feel this book would be
of interest to those already in the field, both nationally and
internationally, as a means of sharing other therapy experiences.'
- Therapeutic Communities Journal 'The book is basically an account
of the Arbours Crisis Centre in London in the words of therapists
who have lived and worked there. Part of the therapeutic community
movement and the antipsychiatry tradition of RD Laing, the centre
has long provided an alternative approach to mental health care. Of
course the book goes beyond simply documenting the development of
the centre to offer a an implicit critique of mainstream
psychiatric treatment and an argument "for a humane, useful and
cost-effective alternative to traditional, physical, psychiatric
treatments".' - Mental Health Today A major question facing
therapists today is how to treat psychosis effectively while
maintaining patients' dignity, self-respect and, as far as
possible, their psychological and social functioning. The authors
of Beyond Madness have all been associated with the Arbours Crisis
Centre in London, a unique facility established in 1973 where
therapists and patients, or guests, live together in order to
establish a space where extremes of distress can be tolerated,
understood and ameliorated. This book provides important and
engaging accounts of the special personal and interpersonal care
offered by the Arbours Crisis Centre and kindred facilities. The
authors demonstrate different ways of working with psychotic
persons within individual, group and community settings. They
describe the extraordinary experience of living and working at the
Centre including the five stages of stay that guests invariably
pass through. In addition, they discuss different strategies for
intervening, especially with people who self-harm, and provide a
theoretical framework for their interventions. They explore issues
of power, authority and money, and show that the work of the Centre
is cost-effective in comparison to other treatment modes. At a time
when biological treatments predominate, Beyond Madness illustrates
and argues for a humane, useful and cost-effective alternative to
traditional, physical, psychiatric interventions.
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