1. Yuko Kawanishi, “Somatization of Asians: An Artifact of Western Medicalization?” Transcultural Psychiatric Research Review 29 (1992): 5–36.
2. Cf. Derek Summerfield, “Depression: Epidemic or Pseudo-Epidemic,” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 99 (2006): 161–62.
3. Allan Janik and Stephen Toulmin, Wittgenstein’s Vienna (Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 1996).
4. Alan Stone, “Law, Science, and Psychiatric Malpractice: A Response to Herman’s Indictment of Psychoanalytic Psychiatry,” American Journal of Psychiatry 147 (1990): 419–27.
5. William Frosch, cited in Mitchell Wilson, “DSM-III and the Transformation of American Psychiatry: A History,” American Journal of Psychiatry 150 (1993): 407. Noting that Robert Spitzer assumed leadership of the Task Force amid a crisis of legitimacy in American psychiatry, Hannah Decker adds, “We are used to seeing such a pattern in history on a larger scale. An illustration of this occurred in the sixteenth century when a crisis in the Roman Catholic Church was taken in hand by an ardently devoted and charismatic monk and theologian, Martin Luther. The Protestant Reformation resulted. This is not at all to compare Spitzer to Luther nor DSM-III to the Protestant Reformation.” Hannah Decker, The Making of DSM-III: A Diagnostic Manual’s Conquest of American Psychiatry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), p. 83.