Foreword by Robert Spitzer, M.D.
Preface
1: The Concept of Depression
2: The Anatomy of Normal Sadness
3: Sadness With and Without Case: Depression from Ancient Times
through the Nineteenth Century
4: Depression in the Twentieth Century
5:
6: Importing Pathology into the Community
7: The Surveillance of Sadness
8: The DSM and Biological Research about Depression
9: The Rise of Antidepressant Drug Treatments
10: The Failure of hte Social Sciences to Distinguish Sadness from
Depressive Disorder
11: Conclusion
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
Allan V. Horwitz is Professor of Sociology and Dean of Social and
Behavioral Sciences at Rutgers University. He is the author of many
articles and a number of books on various aspects on mental
illness, including The Social Control of Mental Illness, The Logic
of Social Control, and Creating Mental Illness. Jerome C. Wakefield
is University Professor and Professor of Social Work at New York
University,
and he has also taught at the University of Chicago, Columbia
University, and Rutgers University. He is an authority on the
intersection between philosophy and the mental health professions
and the author of many articles on diagnosis of mental disorder.
...one of the most important books in the field of psychiatry published in the last few years...a brilliant book with a significance well beyond its narrow but important subject. Spectator This wonderful book will alter professional thinking. Nursing Standards ...an interesting and thought-provoking book that underscores the need to examine more fully each patient's psychological illness and the factors contributing to it...[a good book for] anyone interested in understanding depression more fully and the place normal sadness has in our society. Doody's Notes ...[this book] could alter the official definition of depression, change the way we get mood-enhancing drugs, and clarify how effectively our culture delivers well-being. Reason Magazine Allan Horwitz and Jerome Wakefield's important book... is part of a gathering blowback against the pathologisation and medicalisation of the ordinary human condition of sadness after loss... what they do accomplish in critiquing psychiatric diagnosis of depression is important enough to make much of this book required reading for depression researchers and clinicians. The Lancet ...a work of deep scholarship... Hugh Freeman, Times Literary Supplement
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