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movies, evil, psychiatry, popular culture, psychiatry in popular culture

Cinema’s Sinister Psychiatrists
From Caligari to Hannibal

Publisher: McFarland Books

Print ISBN: 978-0-7864-6390-9
Ebook ISBN: 978-0-7864-9241-1
37 photos, filmography, notes, bibliography, index
256pp. softcover (7 x 10) 2012

Purchase Price: $45.00

About the Book
Film history is merged with psychiatric history seamlessly to show how and why bad depictions of mind doctors (especially hypnotists) occur in early film, long before Hannibal Lecter burst upon the scene. The German Expressionist Dr. Caligari is not cinema’s first psychotic charlatan, but he launches the stereotype of screen psychiatrists who are sicker than their patients. Many film psychiatrists function as political metaphors, while many more reflect real life clinical controversies.

This book discusses films with diabolical drugging, unethical experimentation, involuntary incarceration, sexual exploitation, lobotomies, “shock schlock,” conspiracy theories and military medicine, to show how fact informs fantasy, and when fantasy trumps reality. Traditional asylum thrillers changed after hospital stays shortened and laws protected people against involuntary commitment. Except for six short “golden years” from 1957 to 1963, portrayals of bad psychiatrists far outnumber good ones and this book tells how and why that was.

 

Reviews

"entertaining...thought provoking...fine scholarship...an intriguing thesis"

-- Metapsychology Online Reviews

 

"recommend"

-- psychiatryonline.org  (American Psychiatric Association)

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