In the present decade, "co-dependency" has sprung up on the landscape
of American popular culture. Portrayed as an addiction-like disease
responsible for a wide range of personal and social problems,
co-dependency spawned a veritable social movement nationwide. 'A
Disease of One's Own' examines the phenomenon of co-dependency from a
sociological perspective, viewing it not as something a person "has,"
but as something a person believes; not as a psychological disease,
but as a belief system that offers its adherents a particular way of
talking about the self and social relationships. The central question
addressed by the book is: Why did co-dependency--one among a plethora
of already-existing discourses on self-help--meet with such widespread
public appeal? Grounded in theories of cultural and social change,
John Steadman Rice argues that this question can only be adequately
addressed by examining the social, cultural, and historical context in
which co-dependency was created and found a receptive public; the
content of the ideas it espoused; and the practical uses to which
co-dependency's adherents could apply those ideas in their everyday
lives. In terms of the larger American context, his analysis links the
emergence of co-dependency with the permeation of psychological
concepts and explanations throughout Western culture over the past
thirty years, focusing particularly on the cultural and social impact
of the popular acceptance of what the author calls "liberation
psychotherapy." Liberation psychotherapy portrays the relationship
between self and society as one of intrinsic antagonism, and argues
that psychological health is inversely related to the self's
accommodation to social expectations. Rice argues that a principal
source of co-dependency's appeal is that it affirms core premises of
liberation psychotherapy, thereby espousing an increasingly
conventional and familiar wisdom. It simultaneously fuses those
premises with addiction-related discourse, providing people with a
means of making sense of the problems of relationship and identity
that have accompanied what Rice terms the "psychologization" of
American life. This brilliant analysis of the phenomenon of
co-dependency will be of interest to psychologists, sociologists,
psychotherapists, and those interested in American popular culture.
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Psychotherapy, Addiction and the Emergence of Co-dependency
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781351321181
Publisert
2017
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter