How Everyone Became Depressed
β Scribed by Shorter, Edward
- Book ID
- 108297676
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 190 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780199948086
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
About one American in five receives a diagnosis of major depression over the course of a lifetime. That's despite the fact that many such patients have no mood disorder; they're not sad, but suffer from anxiety, fatigue, insomnia, or a tendency to obsess about the whole business. "There is a term for what they have," writes Edward Shorter, "and it's a good old-fashioned term that has gone out of use. They have nerves."
In How Everyone Became Depressed , Edward Shorter, a distinguished professor of psychiatry and the history of medicine argues for a return to the old fashioned concept of nervous illness. These are, he writes, diseases of the entire body, not the mind, and as was recognized as early as the 1600s. Shorter traces the evolution of the concept of "nerves" and the "nervous breakdown" in western medical thought. He points to a great paradigm shift in the first third of the twentieth century, driven especially by Freud, that transferred behavioral disorders from neurology to psychiatry, spotlighting the mind, not the body. The catch-all term "depression" now applies to virtually everything, "a jumble of non-disease entities, created by political infighting within psychiatry, by competitive struggles in the pharmaceutical industry, and by the whimsy of the regulators." Depression is a real and very serious illness, he argues; it should not be diagnosed so promiscuously, and certainly not without regard to the rest of the body. Meloncholia, he writes, "the quintessence of the nervous breakdown, reaches deep into the endocrine system, which governs the thyroid and adrenal glands among other organs."
In a learned yet provocative challenge to psychiatry, Shorter argues that the continuing misuse of "depression" represents nothing less than "the failure of the scientific imagination."
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Ignorance is bliss, or so hopes Antoine, the lead character in Martin Page's stinging satire, _How I Became Stupid --_a modern day _Candide_ with a Darwin Award like sensibility. A twenty-five-year-old Aramaic scholar, Antoine has had it with being brilliant and deeply self-aware in today's culture.
Over a quarter-centuryβs work from the 2003 winner of the Arrell Gibson Award for Lifetime Achievement.This collection gathers poems from throughout Joy Harjoβs twenty-eight-year career, beginning in 1973 in the age marked by the takeover at Wounded Knee and the rejuvenation of indigenous cultures i
When an insect-borne plague begins to envelop the world, three sixteen-year-olds struggle to survive amongst the healthy βtruesβ and the infected βwickedsβ in this gripping dystopian tale from the author of *The Winter Place.* A plague, called Wickedness, is pulsing through the world; and in it
**When an insect-borne plague begins to envelop the world, three sixteen-year-olds struggle to survive amongst the healthy "trues" and the infected "wickeds" in this gripping dystopian tale from the author of *The Winter Place*.** A plague, called Wickedness, is pulsing through the world; and in i
**When an insect-borne plague begins to envelop the world, three sixteen-year-olds struggle to survive amongst the healthy βtruesβ and the infected βwickedsβ in this gripping dystopian tale from the author of _The Winter Place_.** A plague, called Wickedness, is pulsing through the world; and in it