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One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping Culture Is Eroding Self-Reliance
 
 
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One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping Culture Is Eroding Self-Reliance [Hardcover]

Christina Hoff Sommers , Sally Satel
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 310 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press (April 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0312304439
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312304430
  • Product Dimensions: 21.8 x 13.5 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 837,667 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Christina Hoff Sommers
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars If three stars equals 'average', then this deserves less, 29 July 2009
If three stars equals 'average', then this deserves less

Before I begin, allow me to first state that I am a HUGE Christina Hoff Sommers fan. I think she is a superb American intellectual with an original and sharp mind. I have read two of her previous works 'Boys' (*****) and 'Who Stole?' (****). Sadly, this however, is not in the same league and so I urge those with an enquiring mind to check out her two previous books.

On to the review. Why is this book SO bad (because it is VERY disappointingly so). Well perhaps because this time Dr. hoff Sommers was joined by a co-author, Sally Satel. With the addition of another writer to negotiate with, maybe it is difficult to unite and find a common 'voice' (that's a feminist joke...), anyway, unless they actually designate chapters according to their relevant area of expertise, I fear the idea of 'casually' co-authoring can never really function and be successful, because it never achieves any kind of cohesion. In this instance they just don't articulate their conjecture very well, as if they couldn't agree.

In addition to and stemming from this major point is the fact that this text is a MESS. It sincerely lacks unity and cohesion. If you flipped through my copy, you would see 'transition' written numerous times in red pen along with 'tenuous', 'dubious' and 'define terms'. I really cannot state that enough. I would even argue that chapter two 'Esteem Thyself', should have been the opening chapter. This really reads more like a mid to late draft of an undergraduate thesis, than a book written by two very intelligent and (supposedly experienced) authors. I am not sure who (if anyone) actually edited this book, but they did a stunningly poor job and on their shoulders too, should lay some of the blame.

Another very serious issue which also arises from the previous points is that there is an acute lack of a strong central thesis to this work. Surely they set out with some hypothesis that read something akin to;
"Therapism is ruining America and Americans. It is diminishing the American spirit and causing the nation to become mentally weak and dysfunctional. This treatise sets out to examine and define the term 'therapism', its origins and root and how it plays an ever-increasing role in post-war American society. We aim to show that the shift from self-reliance to therapism is a major cause in many of the social ills currently plaguing contemporary society, and furthermore we will also show how the current therapist boom is both costly invasive and ineffectual. We shall do this by..." etc. By not having this central structure the arguments get VERY cloudy and swerve severely off course, getting lost altogether by about chapter four.

Dr. Hoff Sommers' usually answers her critics with both the quality and depth of her arguments and by her immense bibliography and extensive footnotes - although she might write in 'popular' themes, don't be fooled, she is a true scholar. In this text too, there are about eighty pages of (foot)notes, and yet despite this, despite the fact this work wants to appear scholarly, it just isn't. It just doesn't reach the bar, either philosophically or intellectually. Even with these notes, the arguments are not persuasive, and furthermore it is DULL, incredibly dull and very, very un-engaging. Despite the pages of references I can't help repeating myself to state that it reads like a very amateurish pseudo-intellectually 'told-you-so'. In fact, despite all the footnotes, I marked numerous pages with the correction 'citation?'. There were numerous banal or inflammatory statements that were pure conjecture masquerading as the Truth that carried no citation; p45, p46, p81 and p132 to name but four.

In addition to the comments above, one very amateurish point is the fact the text is littered with poorly or ill-chosen words, incorrect grammar and spelling mistakes. Add to this Sommers and Satel's bizarre use of ill-chosen personal pronouns. I am not a member of the 'grammar police', but in this age of enlightened relations I feel we can dispense with the gender pronouns: 'he' or 'she' in favour of 'they'. That is, unless, there is some specific case to cite. That seems a reasonable request. Why then on the following pages do the authors correlate the male pronoun with anti-social behaviour or some negative undertaking: p86, p96, p97, p98, p101, p102, p103, p106, p107, p108, p109, p114... the list is endless and nearly all usage refers to negative actions. Of the two notable uses of female pronouns p108 and p134 both are used in a positive light. This is very amateurish journalism of the Bill O'Reilly or Ann Coulter variety and not something one expects to find in any text that wishes to be taken seriously. Likewise I don't expect the phrase 'Third World' (p175) to appear in any serious work. Basically I could go on and on with these minor errors, but I won't! What such elementary mistakes serve to accomplish is to dilute any strength the overall thesis might have had, tarnish any possible merit and ultimately render eighty pages of references utterly worthless.

I purchased this book, not because I am particularly interested in the subject, rather, because I am interested in the intellect of one of the authors (Hoff Sommers), that said I did imagine I would end up with a lot to think about and with all my mental faculty stimulated. As so many reviewers say 'I wanted to like this book', but ultimately that wasn't even enough. This book a just such an ill-conceived mess, a veritable mélange of half-truths, twisted citations and selective 'cropping' of the facts. It has no central pillar around which arguments are conceived and constructed. It lacks cohesion, depth, sparkle and interest. It is dull and uninspiring, poorly edited; grammatically and intellectually weak. My advice, seek and alternative text or wait for the next (revised) edition, when hopefully it will have lost an author (Satel) and gained a thorough edit.
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Amazon.com: 3.5 out of 5 stars (57 customer reviews)

186 of 215 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Please, no guilt by association, 2 May 2005
By J. W. Bush - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping Culture Is Eroding Self-Reliance (Hardcover)
Reviewers have noted that the authors are affiliated with the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. I suggest that no one take this as having any bearing, pro or con, on the merits of the book. As a unabashed liberal in most matters, I am appalled by what has happened to this country since 1980 and am embarrassed to share a middle initial and surname with the current President. Yet as a clinical psychologist I can confirm much of what Sommers and Satel say about the blight of "therapism" that has overtaken us in the last 30 or so years. Painful as it may be to admit, every now and then there comes a conservative who gets something right. Sommers and Satel are two such. The case they make deserves to be taken quite seriously.

61 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book that needs to be seriously looked at, 9 May 2005
By Brooklyn reviewer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping Culture Is Eroding Self-Reliance (Hardcover)
I believe that the review by Hara Marano, posted by another reader, misstates much of what the book has to say. Interestingly, the authors are not at all against psychotherapy per se. They are against a culture which medicalizes certain disorders so as to reduce the sense of individual responsibility for the choices that people make. At the same time, they are against a species of one-size-fits-all turnkey psychotherapy promulgated and administered by what I, for many years, have referred to as the "trauma mafia." This term may be unfair as many of these individuals are caring and well-meaning. Sommers and Satel maintain that many of these interventions are unnecessary and sometimes have unintentional negative effects in that they may interfere with help naturally present in community and psyche.

Some reviews have mainted that trauma counselors, whom the authors criticize, no longer use those methods that the authors are critical of. Were this only the case! I would personally advocate a worldwide moratorium on the training of both trauma and grief counselors.

As a psychotherapist, supervisor, and teacher with over thiry years of professional practice, I would say that a good part of my experience and that of my colleagues jibes with much of what the authors have to say. We fortunately did not see what we were told we would see after September 11. Many believe that PTSD is a relatively rare disorder which usually resolves without specific psychological intervention.

Marano states cognitive behavioral therapy has been extensively studied and has been found to be as least as effective as medication for many disorders. But a closer reading of psychotherapy outcome studies leads us to interpret claims of effectiveness with the utmost caution. The same can be said about much drug research. Although the problems with this research are beyond the scope of what I wish to write about here, the literature is there for those who would like to review it.

Any book that makes the leap from patterns of thought (e.g., the human potential movement) to gross issues tearing at the very fabric of society is bound to take some liberties and may not always apply so neatly. However, One Nation Under Therapy in my view is not glib, and is extensively documented. Whether what the authors call "therapism" weakens society is open to debate, but the authors make some important points which should not be ignored.

It's unfortunate that some here have dismissed a thoughtful and coherent thesis on the basis of presumptions about the authors' politics. I think that one can safely let the message speak for itself.

34 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An engaging, provocative, and excellent book, 2 May 2005
By Richard J. McNally - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: One Nation Under Therapy: How the Helping Culture Is Eroding Self-Reliance (Hardcover)
Contrary to the misreadings of some reviewers, Sommers and Satel are not attacking therapy. Indeed, the second author practices psychiatry in an inner city drug abuse clinic. Rather, the authors provide a refreshingly trenchant critique of the inappropriate extrapolation of the therapeutic ethos to settings where it does not belong and may, in fact, be harmful. More importantly, their conclusions are well-grounded in empirical research, as anyone perusing their abundant endnotes can see. "One Nation Under Therapy" will doubtlessly incite powerful emotional reactions, both pro and con. But if it also stimulates critical thought about "therapism" in our culture, it will count as a resounding success.
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