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In Therapy We Trust: America's Obsession with Self-Fulfillment » (New Edition)

Book cover image of In Therapy We Trust: America's Obsession with Self-Fulfillment by Eva S. Moskowitz

Authors: Eva S. Moskowitz
ISBN-13: 9780801889745, ISBN-10: 080188974X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Date Published: June 2008
Edition: New Edition

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Author Biography: Eva S. Moskowitz

Eva S. Moskowitz has served on the New York City Council. She taught American history at Vanderbilt University, the University of Virginia, and the City University of New York and in 1997 produced and directed a documentary on the changing roles of women in the period after World War II.

Book Synopsis

From self-esteem talk on Oprah to self-help books like Negaholics and Your Sacred Self, we live in an age fixated on emotional well-being. As Eva Moskowitz argues, Americans today turn to psychological cures as confidently as they once petitioned the Lord with prayer. In Therapy We Trust explores the country's tendency to find psychological explanations — and excuses — for nearly everything.

"In this entertaining, informative, and provocative cultural analysis... Moskowitz explores how the desire for personal happiness became supreme, and how success in every arena from sports to geopolitics has come to be measured 'with a psychological yardstick.'" — Publishers Weekly

"With an acute attention to Dickensian detail, Moskowitz traces the beginnings of our national therapy jones." — Salon

"All of us, rich and poor, black and white, male and female, straight and gay, are part of a cult that worships the psyche, extols feelings as sacred and seeks salvation in happiness and self-esteem. Moskowitz calls this outlook the 'therapeutic gospel.' In Therapy We Trust is her story of how we came under its spell." — Women's Review of Books

"In Therapy We Trust, written in admirably plain prose uncluttered by academic jargon, traces the gradual rise of the therapeutic conception to our current apotheosis of self-centered triviality." — Wilson Quarterly

"A useful antidote to those who would interpret the psychologizing of America as yet another symptom of national decline, rooted in the excesses of the 1960s and the narcissism of the baby-boom generation." — Journal of the History of Medicine

"Making good use of popular andsecondary as well as archival sources, Moskowitz's book reviews the emergence of 'therapeutic agents' (i.e., psychologists, psychiatrists, and professional counselors) in the early twentieth century, their important role in shaping military and federal mental health policy during World War II, and their part in the mass diffusion of increasingly vapid therapeutic prescriptions to the wider public in the postwar period, up to and including the present day." — American Studies International

Eva S. Moskowitz has served on the New York City Council. She taught American history at Vanderbilt University, the University of Virginia, and the City University of New York and in 1997 produced and directed a documentary on the changing roles of women in the period after World War II.

James Hoopes

In Therapy We Trust is a brave and groundbreaking book that will help stir interest and further scholarship in this large and daunting subject America's fascination with the psychological.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Therapeutic Gospel1
1Illness: A New Cure, A New Faith, 1850-190010
2Poverty: Reformers Offer Treatment, 1890-193030
3Marriage: A Science of Personal Relations, 1920-194070
4War: The Soldier's Psyche, 1941-1945100
5Home: The Unhappy Housewife, 1945-1965149
6Social Protest: Liberating the Psyche, 1960-1975178
7Feelings: Expressing the Self, 1970-1980218
8Personal Problems and Public Debate245
Epilogue279
Notes285
Bibliography311
Index327

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