ABSTRACT

`The summaries of evidence have provided ready-made challenges to previously unquestioned medical options ... the book provides a challenging update on the nature of scientific inquiry.' - British Journal of Clinical Psychology
Despite nearly one hundred years of research, very little progress has been achieved in the understanding of schizophrenic behaviour. There remains considerable uncertainty even about the fundamental features of the hypothesised illness.
Reconstructing Schizophrenia subjects the difficult concept of schizophrenia to rigorous scientific, historical and sociological scrutiny. They ask why a biological defect has been assumed in the absence of hard evidence and look at what can be done psychologically to alleviate schizophrenic symptoms. Finally, they explore what new models and research strategies are required in order to understand schizophrenic behaviour. The result is a book that provides a distinctive and critical perspective on modern psychiatric theories and which demonstrates the severe limitations of an exclusively medical approach to understanding madness.

part One|85 pages

The Concept of Schizophrenia — Problems and Prospects

chapter One|20 pages

The Non-Discovery of Schizophrenia?

Kraepelin and Bleuler reconsidered

chapter Two|38 pages

The Syndromes and Symptoms of Psychosis

Or why you can't play 'twenty questions' with the concept of schizophrenia and hope to win

chapter Three|25 pages

Schizophrenia as a Life Process

part Two|121 pages

The Role of Biology in Schizophrenic Behaviour

chapter Four|29 pages

The Genetics of Schizophrenia

Axiom or hypothesis?

part Three|88 pages

From Theory to Therapy

chapter Eight|23 pages

Competing Histories of Madness

Some implications for modern psychiatry

chapter Three|14 pages

Concluding Remarks

Schizophrenia — a suitable case for treatment?