The Roots of the Recovery Movement in Psychiatry : Lessons Learned.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780470682982
- RC455 .D38 2010
Intro -- The Roots of the Recovery Movement in Psychiatry -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 What is the recovery movement in psychiatry? -- 1.2 Rationale for the book -- 1.3 From traitement moral to moral treatment -- 1.4 Reciprocity in community-based care -- 1.5 The everyday and interpersonal context of recovery -- 1.6 Closing the hospital -- 1.7 The rights and responsibilities of citizenship -- 1.8 Agency as a basis for transformation -- 1.9 Why these figures and not others? -- 1.10 Conclusion -- 2 From Traitement Moral to Moral Treatment -- 2.1 The birth of psychiatry as a medical speciality -- 2.2 Philippe Pinel and Jean-Baptise Pussin -- 2.3 Traitement moral -- 2.4 Pinel's psychological interventions -- 2.5 The Retreat at York -- 2.6 Moral treatment or moral management? -- 2.7 From treatment to education -- 2.8 Re-shaping character -- 2.9 The demise of moral treatment -- 2.10 Summary of lessons learned -- 3 Reciprocity in Community-based Care -- 3.1 The advocacy of Dorothea Dix -- 3.2 The legacy of Dorothea Dix -- 3.3 Jane Addams' community alternative -- 3.4 A series of unfortunate, but influential, events -- 3.5 The founding of the first American 'settlement' -- 3.6 Forty years at Hull-House -- 3.7 Distilling the active ingredients -- 3.8 Interventions with individuals -- 3.9 Interventions with collectives -- 3.10 Applications to mental health -- 3.11 Summary of lessons learned -- 4 The Everyday and Interpersonal Context of Recovery -- 4.1 The birth of psychiatry as a community-based practice -- 4.2 Beyond the illness paradigm (by John Strauss, part 1) -- 4.3 Growing up inside Meyer's 'common sense' psychiatry (by John Strauss, part 2) -- 4.4 Subjectivity and the person (by John Strauss, part 3) -- 4.5 Blending science and art in a human science (by John Strauss, part 4).
4.6 From a psychiatry based in death to a psychiatry based in life -- 4.7 Problems in everyday living and their resolution -- 4.8 Opportunity and occupation -- 4.9 The interpersonal context of recovery -- 4.10 Summary of lessons learned -- 5 Closing the Hospital -- 5.1 The failure of the asylum -- 5.2 Erving Goffman and the presentation of self -- 5.3 The hospital as 'total institution' -- 5.4 Franco Basaglia and the Italian mental health reform movement -- 5.5 De-institutionalization the Italian way -- 5.6 Bracketing the illness -- 5.7 'Freedom is therapeutic' -- 5.8 Avoiding the re-creation of the asylum in the community -- 5.9 Social inclusion -- 5.10 Summary of lessons learned -- 6 The Rights and Responsibilities of Citizenship -- 6.1 Recovery as a civil rights movement -- 6.2 The incomplete world of Martin Luther King, Jnr -- 6.3 Can rights be given? -- 6.4 Recovery delayed is recovery denied -- 6.5 Color blindness and capitalism -- 6.6 The complete subject of Gilles Deleuze -- 6.7 Oedipus and anti-Oedipus -- 6.8 Schizophrenic speech and Watergate -- 6.9 Community inclusion vs community integration -- 6.10 Summary of lessons learned -- 7 Agency as the Basis for Transformation -- 7.1 The need for a new conceptual framework -- 7.2 Beyond de-institutionalization and community tenure -- 7.3 Rights and recovery -- 7.4 The capabilities approach of Amartya Sen -- 7.5 Applying a capabilities approach to the work of transformation -- 7.6 Human agency and mediation: the work of Lev Vygotsky -- 7.7 Action theory, the zone of proximal development and scaffolding -- 7.8 Applying activity analysis: the case of fossilized behavior -- 7.9 Applying activity analysis: using the zone of proximal development -- 7.10 Summary of lessons learned -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Index.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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