Chapter 1: "Cut the Problem off at the Roots": The Beginning.
1.1: "A Social Menace"
1.2: "Our Race Must Rapidly Deteriorate"
Chapter 2: "He Would Have Sold his Soul to the Devil": Ernst Rüdin and Family Studies.
2.1: Task Force 2
2.2: "Mercy Death"
Chapter 3: "Final Solution": Franz Kallmann and Twin Studies.
3.1: "Bullheaded Oafs"
3.2: "Safely on the March"
Chapter 4: "Dire Birth": The Story of the Genain Sisters.
4.1: "I Will Find You Wherever You Go"
4.2: "A Conscientious Public Official"
Chapter 5: Adoption Studies.
Chapter 6: "It's Nobody's Fault": The Mass-Marketing of Mental Illness.
6.1: The Re-branding of Psychiatry
6.2: "DNA Roulette"
Chapter 7: The Human Genome Project Era.
7.1: "The Worst Disease Affecting Manking"
7.2: "Awash in Genes"
Chapter 8: "Born Schizophrenic": The Story of January Schofield.
8.1: "The Risperdal Didn't Work"
8.2: "Her Full Potential Might be Lost"
8.3: "The Overriding Factor is Love for the Child"
Chapter 9: Blaming the victim": Trauma and Psychosis.
9.1: "Infantile Fantasies"
9.2: "When Blame is Shifted Outward, So Is Rage"
9.3: "Not Just Triggers"
9.4: "The Myth of the Schizophrenogenic Mother"
Chapter 10: "We Must Take Great Care": The Asylum Era.
10.1: "Moral Therapy"
10.2: "The Most Grievous of Human Diseases"
10.3: "The Kitchen is Not a Drugstore"
10.4: "Dead Bodies"
Chapter 11: "To Redeem the World": Frieda Fromm-Reichmann and Chestnut Lodge.
11.1: Rose Garden
11.2: "The Depths of an Inferno"
Chapter 12: "I Actually Wanted to Help": Ronald Laing and Kingsley Hall.
12.1: "Listening to Nutcases"
12.2: "No One Cared"
12.3: "A Double Bind"
Chapter 13: Soteria House and Open Dialogue Therapy.
13.1: "A Crisis in Living"
13.2: A Cure for Schizophrenia
Chapter 14: The Ghosts of Rüdin and Kallmann.
Patrick D Hahn is an Affiliate Professor of Biology at Loyola University Maryland, USA, and a freelance writer.
This book explores the history of genetic determinist theories of mental illness, beginning in the nineteenth century and continuing right up to the present day. A century of research in the field of psychiatric genetics, from family studies to twin studies to adoption studies to genome-wide association studies, has produced no credible evidence of a strong genetic components to so-called “mental illnesses,” no findings that help the human condition in any way, and in fact has caused great harm by diverting attention away from the well-established causes of these conditions, which have their roots in trauma and other adverse childhood experiences. This book also explores the long tradition of humanistic psychiatry and its great success in treating these conditions with an empathetic, client centered approach—a tradition that has been all but forgotten in the modern era of biogenetic explanations and drug-centered treatments for mental illness.
Patrick D Hahn is an Affiliate Professor of Biology at Loyola University Maryland, USA, and a freelance writer.