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Class and Mental Illness: A Community Study. By August B. Hollingshead and Fredrick C. Redlich. Price, 7. 50. Pp. 442. John Wiley and the general drift of their work is very well known. But in Social Class and Mental Illness most of the major data of their project are given for the first time in detail. (A second volume, entitled Social Class, Family Dynamics, and Mental Illness, by Jerome Myers and Bertram Roberts, will soon be published. ) The entire project represents trends of capital importance that are affecting the nature and destiny of psychiatry. One trend is the sociologizing of psychiatric research=m- incorporation of sociological perspectives into the study of mental disease and its treatment. The parallel and conjoint researches of sociologists and psychiatrists have supported the movement toward a social psychiatry, itself a close relative of what has come to be called, rather broadly, of course, milieu therapy. All of this increasing emphasis upon the possible (its supporters claim, the actual) importance of social factors in mental illness is itself linked with the continuous change in the position of psychiatry itself as a profession. If psychiatry were a stationary profession,
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August B. Hollingshead
Yale University
Fredrick C. Redlich
Yale New Haven Hospital
American Journal of Public Health
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Hollingshead et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a11bf5e0b2fd5f9c6c8ff34 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.97.10.1756