Transforming Normality into Pathology: The DSM and the Outcomes of Stressful Social Arrangements

Author:

Horwitz Allan V.1

Affiliation:

1. Allan V. Horwitz is Dean for the Social and Behavioral Sciences at Rutgers University. He is the author of The Social Control of Mental Illness (Academic Press, 1982), The Logic of Social Control (Plenum Press, 1991), Creating Mental Illness (University of Chicago Press, 2002), and, with Jerry Wakefield, The Loss of Sadness: The Transformation of Ordinary Sadness into Depressive Disorder (Oxford University Press, 2007), as well as more than 70 articles and chapters on various social aspects of mental...

Abstract

The sociology of stress shows how nondisordered people often become distressed in contexts such as chronic subordination; the losses of status, resources, and attachments; or the inability to achieve valued goals. Evolutionary psychology indicates that distress arising in these contexts stems from psychological mechanisms that are responding appropriately to stressful circumstances. A diagnosis of mental disorder, in contrast, indicates that these mechanisms are not functioning as they are designed to function. The American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, however, has come to treat both the natural results of the stress process and individual pathology as mental disorders. A number of social groups benefit from and promote the conflation of normal emotions with dysfunctions. The result has been to overestimate the number of people who are considered to be disordered, to focus social policy on the supposedly unmet need for treatment, and to enlarge the social space of pathology in the general culture.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology

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