Therapeutic Revolutions: Medicine, Psychiatry, and American Culture, 1945-1970

Therapeutic Revolutions: Medicine, Psychiatry, and American Culture, 1945-1970 book cover

Therapeutic Revolutions: Medicine, Psychiatry, and American Culture, 1945-1970

Author(s): Martin Halliwell (Author)

  • Publisher: Rutgers University Press
  • Publication Date: 19 April 2013
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 400 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0813560640
  • ISBN-13: 9780813560649

Book Description

Therapeutic Revolutions examines the evolving relationship between American medicine, psychiatry, and culture from World War II to the dawn of the 1970s. In this richly layered intellectual history, Martin Halliwell ranges from national politics, public reports, and healthcare debates to the ways in which film, literature, and the mass media provided cultural channels for shaping and challenging preconceptions about health and illness. Beginning with a discussion of the profound impact of World War II and the Cold War on mental health, Halliwell moves from the influence of work, family, and growing up in the Eisenhower years to the critique of institutional practice and the search for alternative therapeutic communities during the 1960s. Blending a discussion of such influential postwar thinkers as Erich Fromm, William Menninger, Erving Goffman, Erik Erikson, and Herbert Marcuse with perceptive readings of a range of cultural text that illuminate mental health issues – among them Spellbound, Shock Corridor, Revolutionary Road, and I Never Promised You a Rose Garden – this compelling study argues that the postwar therapeutic revolutions closely interlink contrasting discourses of authority and liberation.

Editorial Reviews

Review

Martin Halliwell offers fresh and inventive insights into the postwar period, showing mastery over an amazing range of material to demonstrate how fully the therapeutic triumphed in American culture. –Stephen Whitfield, author of The Culture of the Cold War

About the Author

MARTIN HALLIWELL is a professor of American studies and deputy pro-vice-chancellor for Internationalization at the University of Leicester, U.K. He was the 18th chair of the British Association for American Studies (2010-13), he is a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and the author of eight monographs and two edited volumes, most recently William James and the Transatlantic Conversation.

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