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Medicalized Psychiatry and the Talking Cure: A Hermeneutic Intervention
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Medicalized Psychiatry and the Talking Cure: A Hermeneutic Intervention

Kevin Aho and Charles Guignon
Human studies, Vol.34(3), pp.293-308
09-2011

Abstract

Charles Taylor Hermeneutic phenomenology Martin Heidegger Medicalized psychiatry Modern Philosophy Philosophy Philosophy of the Social Sciences Political Philosophy Psychotherapy Sociolinguistics Talking cure
The dominance of the medical-model in American psychiatry over the last 30 years has resulted in the subsequent decline of the “talking cure”. In this paper, we identify a number of problems associated with medicalized psychiatry, focusing primarily on how it conceptualizes the self as a de-contextualized set of symptoms. Drawing on the tradition of hermeneutic phenomenology, we argue that medicalized psychiatry invariably overlooks the fact that our identities, and the meanings and values that matter to us, are created and constituted by our dialogical relations with others. While acknowledging the importance of medical and pharmaceutical interventions, we suggest that it is only by means of the dialogical interplay of the talking cure that the client can both recognize unhealthy and self-defeating ways of being and be opened up to the possibility of new meanings and self-interpretations.

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