ABSTRACT

In the late 1950s the psychiatrist R.D.Laing and psychoanalyst Aaron Esterson spent five years interviewing eleven families of female patients diagnosed as 'schizophrenic'. Sanity, Madness and the Family is the result of their work. Eleven vivid case studies, often dramatic and disturbing, reveal patterns of affection and fear, manipulation and indifference within the family. But it was the conclusions they drew from their research that caused such controversy: they suggest that some forms of mental disorder are only comprehensible within their social and family contexts; their symptoms the manifestations of people struggling to live in untenable situations.

Sanity, Madness and the Family was met with widespread hostility by the psychiatric profession on its first publication, where the prevailing view was to treat psychosis as a medical problem to be solved. Yet it has done a great deal to draw attention to the complex and contested nature of psychosis. Above all, Laing and Esterson thought that if you understood the patient's world their apparent madness would become socially intelligible.

This Routledge Classics edition includes a new Foreword by Hilary Mantel.

part |2 pages

Families

chapter 1|22 pages

Families 1 The Abbotts

chapter 2|28 pages

The Blairs

chapter 3|36 pages

The Churches

chapter 4|24 pages

The Danzigs

chapter 5|14 pages

The Edens

chapter 6|16 pages

The Fields

chapter 7|19 pages

The Golds

chapter 8|29 pages

The Heads

chapter 9|21 pages

The Irwins

chapter 10|13 pages

The Kings

chapter 11|36 pages

The Lawsons