New Books in Psychology

Orna Ophir, “On the Borderland of Madness: Psychosis, Psychoanalysis, and Psychiatry in Postwar USA” (Routledge, 2015)

8 snips
Nov 7, 2016
Clinical psychologist Orna Ophir, an adjunct professor with a PhD in the history of science, delves into the tumultuous relationship between psychoanalysis and psychiatry in post-war America. She explores how the treatment of psychosis led to a schism between these once-close fields. The discussion touches on the historical evolution of mental health care, the discomfort American analysts felt amid neo-Semitic ideas, and the need for psychoanalysts to confront deeper anxieties around death and violence.
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ANECDOTE

Formative Hospital Experience

  • Orna Ophir describes volunteering at an Israeli psychiatric hospital as a formative training ground for psychoanalytic work with psychotic patients.
  • She returned years later to find psychoanalytic presence vanished and biomedical discourse dominant.
ANECDOTE

Return To A Changed Clinic

  • Ophir recounts returning to the same hospital and finding only one psychoanalyst left after retirements.
  • She observed clinical trials, deep brain stimulation projects, and a takeover of biological language.
INSIGHT

Thought Collectives Shape Theory

  • Ophir uses Ludwik Fleck’s concept of thought collectives to analyze psychoanalytic debates in journals.
  • She finds that different journals represented distinct thought styles shaping collective knowledge.
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