This book is a masterful exposition of "the therapeutic turn" taken by our consumer society. Ole Jacob Madsen demonstrates how psychology infiltrates its every corner. Although psychology greatly influences the present, it is unable to understand its own operations due to its inherent individualism. This book will help the reader understand both psychology and contemporary society, and the relation between them. - Svend Brinkmann, Professor of Psychology, University of Aalborg, Denmark
This book builds and expands upon elements of what has come to be known as Critical Psychology. Its originality lies in its analysis of the pervasive and insidious bleed of psychological ideology through the fabric of western culture. It will be welcomed by postgraduate students in psychology and social work, and in affiliated ‘helping’ and health profession courses. - Ian Law, General Manager Client Services, Relationships Australia
"Its exposure of psychology to political scrutiny makes it significant reading for trainee and practising counselling and clinical psychologists, and for counsellors and psychotherapists interested in considering the limitations and distortions of the profession." Colin Feltham, Therapy Today
"This book is a masterful exposition of "the therapeutic turn" taken by our consumer society. Ole Jacob Madsen demonstrates how psychology infiltrates its every corner. Although psychology greatly influences the present, it is unable to understand its own operations due to its inherent individualism. This book will help the reader understand both psychology and contemporary society, and the relation between them." - Svend Brinkmann, Professor of Psychology, University of Aalborg, Denmark
"This book builds and expands upon elements of what has come to be known as Critical Psychology. Its originality lies in its analysis of the pervasive and insidious bleed of psychological ideology through the fabric of western culture. It will be welcomed by postgraduate students in psychology and social work, and in affiliated ‘helping’ and health profession courses." - Ian Law, General Manager Client Services, Relationships Australia
"Its exposure of psychology to political scrutiny makes it significant reading for trainee and practising counselling and clinical psychologists, and for counsellors and psychotherapists interested in considering the limitations and distortions of the profession." - Colin Feltham, Therapy Today
"In this largely sociological account, Madsen frames the emergence of therapeutic culture as a substitute for the displaced wisdoms of religion, making it an indispensable feature of (late) modernity. But given its complementary relationship to a now hegemonic neoliberal rationality – Madsen defines the neoliberal ideal as "You shall govern yourself" (p 109) – the ideological bias of the therapeutic ethos is obvious... The therapeutic turn is essential reading" — Wahbie Long, Psychology is Society