6. Anti-Psychiatry
ďSzasz remarked that it was folly to speak of the
abuses of institutional psychiatry
ďInstitutional psychiatry was itself an abuse,
as âharming persons categorized as insane is
its essential functionâ
9. Anti-Psychiatry
ď For Szasz the violence of modern psychiatry finds its
counterpart in the historical violence of the
Inquisition, sanctioned by the Catholic Church to
wage war on witches and witchcraft, functioning to
maintain the hegemony of the Church through the
social upheavals wrought by feudalism.
10. Anti-Psychiatry
ď Szasz described the very idea of mental illness as a
myth.
ď Described some of the social processes and
consequences of medicalization
ď The difficulties that brought people to seek help from
mental health professionals were to be better
described as âproblems of livingââa phrase
originally coined by Szasz, though one with which
Laing would have wholeheartedly concurred.
11. Anti-Psychiatry
Laingâs
ďThe experiences and behaviors regarded as
indicative of mental illness were really
âstrategies that a person invents in order to live
in an unlivable situationâ.
13. Anti-Psychiatry
From somewhat different starting positions, Laing
and Szasz protested
ďthe illegitimacy of coercive psychiatric power
ďthe medical metaphors that accompany it
ďquite complementary ways rendered explicit the
processes by which madness is manufactured.
14. Capitalism
ďAlthough Laingâs and Szaszâs critiques of
institutional psychiatry arise from an
understanding of the unequal distribution of
power in society, we have seen that they have
quite distinct views on the origins of coercive
power.
15. Capitalism
ďMarxism
ďCommunist, anticapitalist, collectivist, anti-
American, left-liberal statist, and socialist
ďâIt is true of course, that in traditional, coercive
psychiatry, the anti psychiatrists and I face the
same enemy. So did, in another context, Stalin
and Churchill. The old Arab proverb that âthe
enemy of my enemy is my friendâ makes good
sense indeed in politics and war. But it makes no
sense at all in intellectual and moral discourseâ
(Szasz).
16. Capitalism
ďSzasz was raised by wealthy parents in prewar
liberal Hungary, Laing in Scotland by parents
of lower middle-class standing.
ďSzasz initially came to the United States to
escape the threat of fascism and later saw his
country of birth falling into Soviet hands
18. Therapy
ď Laing, work which realized that people experiencing
extremely distressing states of mind could benefit
from having a true place of safetyâan asylumâto
reside in.
ď Such social and collective forms of engagement, with
people whose distress has furnished them into the raw
materials of the psychiatric industry, would only be
disparaged by Szasz, who appears to abhor any
collective enterprise in the public arena that has not
been opened up to the free market as a âpersonal
service.â
19. Take Home Message
ď The anti-psychiatry movement did raise some valid
criticisms of then contemporary psychiatric practice; in
particular, pointing out the negative effects of
institutional living, criticising stigma and labelling, and
alerting psychiatrists to the potential use of political
change in improving patient care.
ď All psychiatrists should retain this healthy scientific
scepticism and be prepared to question their beliefs
about the causes and cures of mental illness.