ABSTRACT

The Routledge International Handbook of Global Therapeutic Cultures explores central lines of enquiry and seminal scholarship on therapeutic cultures, popular psychology, and the happiness industry. Bringing together studies of therapeutic cultures from sociology, anthropology, psychology, education, politics, law, history, social work, cultural studies, development studies, and American Indian studies, it adopts a consciously global focus, combining studies of the psychologisation of social life from across the world. Thematically organised, it offers historical accounts of the growing prominence of therapeutic discourses and practices in everyday life, before moving to consider the construction of self-identity in the context of the diffusion of therapeutic discourses in connection with the global spread of capitalism. With attention to the ways in which emotional language has brought new problematisations of the dichotomy between the normal and the pathological, as well as significant transformations of key institutions, such as work, family, education, and religion, it examines emergent trends in therapeutic culture and explores the manner in which the advent of new therapeutic technologies, the political interest in happiness, and the radical privatisation and financialisation of social life converge to remake self-identities and modes of everyday experience. Finally, the volume features the work of scholars who have foregrounded the historical and contemporary implication of psychotherapeutic practices in processes of globalisation and colonial and postcolonial modes of social organisation. Presenting agenda-setting research to encourage interdisciplinary and international dialogue and foster the development of a distinctive new field of social research, The Routledge International Handbook of Global Therapeutic Cultures will appeal to scholars across the social sciences with interests in the advance of therapeutic discourses and practices in an increasingly psychologised society.

Part 1: Introduction  General Introduction  1. Therapeutic Cultures: Historical Perspectives  2. Charting the Emergence of the Self as a Social Representation from Early Modernity to 20th Century: A Constructionist Approach  3. Self-Help, Therapeutic Industries, and Neoliberalism  Part 2: Therapeutic Discourses  Editors’ Introduction  4. Happiness Imperialism  5. Spirituality and Happiness from New Thought to Positive Psychology  6. Resilience: The Failure of Success  7. Stigmas Old and New: The Changing Nature of Stigma in the Twenty-first Century  8. ADHD as a Symptom of the Times: Social Distress and its Naturalization  9. Mindfulness as a Self-help Fad: The Mindfulness Industry, Popular Psychological Knowledge and the Sociological Imagination  Part 3: Therapeutic Experiences  Editors’ Introduction  10. Self-esteem, Happiness and the Therapeutic Fad Cycle  11. The Cultivation of Subjectivity of Young People in Youth Support Systems  12. Mental Health, Subjectivity and Subjective Development: The Multiple Angles of Mental Health Care  13. Embodied Therapeutic Culture  14. Unlearning Privilege: The Therepeutic Ethos and the Battle Within the White Self  15. Therapeutic Culture and Relational Wellbeing  Part 4: Therapeutic Practices  Editors’ Introduction  16. Globalizing Personality: A View from China  17. Digital Therapeutic Culture  18. Counselling and Confucianism in China  19. Between Freud and Umbanda: Therapeutic Constellations in Buenos Aires, Argentina  20. Faith Healing: Haunted Discourses of Distress in India  21. Masculine Performers and Good Girls: Negotiating Gender Norms in Therapeutic Engagements  Part 5: Therapeutic Technologies and Therapeutic Institutions  Editors’ Introduction  22. Therapeutic Education? Negotiating 'Evidence' and 'Experience' as part of the Professionalization of Psychiatry Students in India  23. The Crisis of Psychotherapy and the Road to a Post-Therapeutic Future  24. India’s Digital Therapeutic Assemblage: Smartphone Apps, Stress, and Mental Health  25. The Nordic Therapeutic Welfare State and its Resilient Citizens  26. Victim and Therapeutic Cultures and the Contentious Climate of Universities  27. Undead Psyche: Post-colonial Art as Therapeutic Paradox in the Caribbean  28. Psychology Estranged: Mind, Culture and Capitalism  Part 6: Therapeutic Politics  Editors’ Introduction  29. Neo-liberal Genre, not so Liberal Consumption: When a Japanese ‘Morning Person’ Book Crossed the South Korean Border  30. Where Has All the Context Gone? Feminism within Therapeutic Culture  31. Trauma’s Empty Promise: Indigenous Death, Economics, and Resurgence  32. Recognising the Political in the Therapeutic: Trauma Talk and Public Inquiries  33. Ontological Coaching and the Post-Therapeutic turn in Neoliberal Governmentality  34. Therapeutic Jurisprudence in Trinidad and Tobago: Legitimacy, Inclusion and the Neo-colonialism of Procedural Justice