Reviews

Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche by Ethan Watters

awyatt12's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging informative reflective medium-paced

5.0

ekarpinski's review

Go to review page

3.0

Almost feels like half a book -- Watters gets partway through and kind of peters out, and it feels like he never quite made up his mind on where he stood on the American psychiatry establishment.

lindsirae's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

One of the best nonfiction books I’ve read in a while!

magzanilla's review against another edition

Go to review page

reflective

3.0

It had some enlightening examples of western psychiatry assuming mental health would be the same worldwide and imposing their analysis+assumptions onto other cultures of what is "right" + "possible" + "healthy thus good", and the dire consequences of that (like psychiatry being used for modern colonialism). Especially, of the 1980s to early 2000s.

And it can be a good introduction into the topic of psychiatric criticism through the perspective of cultural sociology and psych. Especially, for confronting biases in the western bio-medical psychiatric model and its modern successors. As often, nuanced acknowledgements of past and present psychiatry-as-a-tool-of-control is lacking in mainstream discussions.

However, the author's model of cultural mental illness theories and social-pool-of-symptoms, while worth considering - especially as a jumping off point in the Mad Sciences; can be misused very easily to dismiss identities and mental health experiences, despite the "intent" being the exact opposite. As well as failing to acknowledge other aspects in cultural pressure beyond whats obvious to him.

Ethan Watters as an author and psychiatrist, later on has shown to have regressive ideas on different topics.

Such as with Dissociative disorders and abuse victims. Partly due to the cultural phenomenons of The Recovered Memory Movement after the Satanic Panic. But going to another extreme in response to "mass hysteria" as he calls it, is a failure of an analysis.

And this context beyond this particular book itself, alongside the book failing to go deeper on its analysis - heavily docks our impression of it when it comes to the logical conclusion of these models and beliefs if not considered critically.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

elibrary's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging dark informative medium-paced

4.5

Very interesting look at the need for diversifying our understanding of psychology! 

bleeding_gold's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging informative reflective medium-paced

3.25

skylagreyy's review

Go to review page

4.0

second book ive read only at my bartending job. getting paid to educate myself :D anyways this was very good and informative, definitely agree with the points watters makes about using the same definitions for different cultural diagnoses. book did get a bit repetitive, but again that was the point!

alicia03n09's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging informative reflective medium-paced

3.25

Although the discussion of some disorders and cases lacks nuance, particularly in the eating disorder chapter, I found this book very interesting and eye-opening to the various ways in which the West influences mental health experiences and treatments all over the world. I particularly appreciated the distinction between the hyper-introspection and hyper-individualism vs. the conceptualisations of the mind in terms of religious, cultural, ecological  and social levels.

margyly's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Not only does America export a crazy-making culture, we infect other cultures with our mental health diagnoses so as to create mental illnesses in cultures that didn’t have them. Fascinating and sad. Our daughter is in Brazil studying attitudes toward mental illness and treatments among Candomblé practitioners in the Northeast of Brazil. Is she part of the problem or of the solution?

ammmiiiii's review

Go to review page

2.0

A very interesting theory/concept, however explored in a rather shallow way and anecdotal manner by the author. Although included at the end of the book, lack of in-text references makes doing further reading difficult. Watters writes in a very biased, binary way, and, up until the very last page, entirely ignores the promising advances made by and countless lives saved by modern psychiatry.