Movies & Mental Illness: Using Films to Understand Psychotherapy, 2nd ed.

L. Wulsin
{"title":"Movies & Mental Illness: Using Films to Understand Psychotherapy, 2nd ed.","authors":"L. Wulsin","doi":"10.4088/PCC.V08N0311B","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In our society, movies hold a prodigious power to reflect and sometimes shape our culture. In the last 10 years, we've gained easy and inexpensive access to large numbers of movies through libraries, rental stores, cable TV, and the Internet. This should be good news for teachers of all kinds, but how often do we use movies in our teaching? For most of us health educators, the leap from viewing movies as easy entertainment to using them as effective teaching tools requires guidance by experts who know both the movies and the health topic of interest. For teachers of topics relating to mental illness, the first hurdle is the question, “What do we do with so many good movies and so many bad movies about mental illness?” The number of movies about mental illness overwhelms most of us. Then the process of finding the right movie for a class session, selecting the key sections, and preparing the relevant questions can seem like more work than it's worth. \n \nIn their second revised and expanded edition of Movies & Mental Illness, Wedding, Boyd, and Niemiec have provided us an informative guide that draws on nearly 1000 films. This encyclopedic but friendly paperback volume is written for teachers and students of psychopathology courses and is intended for use as a supplement to core psychopathology texts. Medical educators such as teachers of behavioral science curricula in family medicine, other primary care disciplines, and psychiatry will find it a valuable time-saver for those who want to add drama to the classroom. \n \nThe authors, 2 psychologists and a social worker, organize this second edition of Movies & Mental Illness around 13 diagnostic or assessment categories. Each chapter begins with questions to consider while watching the specific movie the authors selected to illustrate the category. The authors then demonstrate their clinical approach in the form of a “fabricated case history” of the key character. A Beautiful Mind and John Nash provide the focus for the chapter on schizophrenia, and Psycho and Norman Bates provide the focus for the chapter on dissociative disorders. Elaboration on the disorders, including theoretical background, and on other movies, including “additional questions for discussion,” gives breadth to the chapters. The authors are not timid about pointing out the misrepresentations of mental illness that contribute to stigma, as listed in Appendix E. However, the book might have been stronger if the authors had acknowledged the potential influence of the disproportionate number of female villains (32%) to female heroes (12%) in Appendix B on perpetuating gender stereotypes. \n \nThe authors have accumulated a wealth of knowledge, most compactly collected in “Appendix G,” their annotated list of nearly 1000 movies, organized by psychopathologic topics, each movie receiving the authors' 5-point rating for the movie's value as a teaching film as well as a work of art. They also maintain a Web site with this information plus periodic updates at http://mimh.edu/danny_wedding. The only shortcoming of the book is the absence of an index. \n \nI've found this book useful for teaching a class of psychiatry residents a session on the psychodynamics of depression, for which I showed a clip from House of Sand and Fog, prompted by this book's chapter on mood disorders. I also used this book to select movies and notes for a Web site for medical students interested in psychosomatic medicine. With the help of Movies & Mental Illness, learning and teaching about psychopathology should become more fun, more dramatic, and more effective.","PeriodicalId":371004,"journal":{"name":"The Primary Care Companion To The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry","volume":"88 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2006-07-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Primary Care Companion To The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.4088/PCC.V08N0311B","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In our society, movies hold a prodigious power to reflect and sometimes shape our culture. In the last 10 years, we've gained easy and inexpensive access to large numbers of movies through libraries, rental stores, cable TV, and the Internet. This should be good news for teachers of all kinds, but how often do we use movies in our teaching? For most of us health educators, the leap from viewing movies as easy entertainment to using them as effective teaching tools requires guidance by experts who know both the movies and the health topic of interest. For teachers of topics relating to mental illness, the first hurdle is the question, “What do we do with so many good movies and so many bad movies about mental illness?” The number of movies about mental illness overwhelms most of us. Then the process of finding the right movie for a class session, selecting the key sections, and preparing the relevant questions can seem like more work than it's worth. In their second revised and expanded edition of Movies & Mental Illness, Wedding, Boyd, and Niemiec have provided us an informative guide that draws on nearly 1000 films. This encyclopedic but friendly paperback volume is written for teachers and students of psychopathology courses and is intended for use as a supplement to core psychopathology texts. Medical educators such as teachers of behavioral science curricula in family medicine, other primary care disciplines, and psychiatry will find it a valuable time-saver for those who want to add drama to the classroom. The authors, 2 psychologists and a social worker, organize this second edition of Movies & Mental Illness around 13 diagnostic or assessment categories. Each chapter begins with questions to consider while watching the specific movie the authors selected to illustrate the category. The authors then demonstrate their clinical approach in the form of a “fabricated case history” of the key character. A Beautiful Mind and John Nash provide the focus for the chapter on schizophrenia, and Psycho and Norman Bates provide the focus for the chapter on dissociative disorders. Elaboration on the disorders, including theoretical background, and on other movies, including “additional questions for discussion,” gives breadth to the chapters. The authors are not timid about pointing out the misrepresentations of mental illness that contribute to stigma, as listed in Appendix E. However, the book might have been stronger if the authors had acknowledged the potential influence of the disproportionate number of female villains (32%) to female heroes (12%) in Appendix B on perpetuating gender stereotypes. The authors have accumulated a wealth of knowledge, most compactly collected in “Appendix G,” their annotated list of nearly 1000 movies, organized by psychopathologic topics, each movie receiving the authors' 5-point rating for the movie's value as a teaching film as well as a work of art. They also maintain a Web site with this information plus periodic updates at http://mimh.edu/danny_wedding. The only shortcoming of the book is the absence of an index. I've found this book useful for teaching a class of psychiatry residents a session on the psychodynamics of depression, for which I showed a clip from House of Sand and Fog, prompted by this book's chapter on mood disorders. I also used this book to select movies and notes for a Web site for medical students interested in psychosomatic medicine. With the help of Movies & Mental Illness, learning and teaching about psychopathology should become more fun, more dramatic, and more effective.
电影与精神疾病:用电影来理解心理治疗,第二版。
在我们的社会中,电影拥有巨大的力量来反映,有时甚至塑造我们的文化。在过去的10年里,我们可以通过图书馆、出租店、有线电视和互联网轻松廉价地观看大量电影。这对所有类型的教师来说都应该是个好消息,但是我们在教学中经常使用电影吗?对于我们大多数健康教育工作者来说,从把看电影当作简单的娱乐活动,到把它们作为有效的教学工具,需要既了解电影又了解健康话题的专家的指导。对于教授精神疾病相关主题的教师来说,第一个障碍是这样一个问题:“我们该如何处理这么多关于精神疾病的好电影和坏电影?”关于精神疾病的电影数量让我们大多数人不知所措。然后,为课堂寻找合适的电影,选择关键部分,准备相关问题的过程似乎比它的价值更多。在《电影与精神疾病》的第二修订版和扩充版中,Wedding、Boyd和Niemiec为我们提供了一个信息丰富的指南,其中引用了近1000部电影。这百科全书,但友好的平装本卷是写的教师和学生的精神病理学课程,并打算用作补充核心精神病理学文本。医学教育工作者,如家庭医学、其他初级保健学科和精神病学的行为科学课程教师,会发现对于那些想在课堂上增加戏剧性的人来说,这是一个宝贵的节省时间的方法。作者是两位心理学家和一位社会工作者,他们围绕13个诊断或评估类别组织了第二版的《电影与精神疾病》。每章开始考虑的问题,而观看具体的电影作者选择来说明类别。然后,作者以关键人物的“捏造的病例史”的形式展示了他们的临床方法。《美丽心灵》和约翰·纳什为精神分裂症这一章提供了重点,《精神病患者》和诺曼·贝茨为解离性障碍这一章提供了重点。对疾病的阐述,包括理论背景,以及对其他电影的阐述,包括“讨论的附加问题”,使章节更加宽广。正如附录e中所列,作者们毫不避讳地指出了对精神疾病的误解会导致耻辱。然而,如果作者们承认附录B中不成比例的女性反派(32%)对女性英雄(12%)对性别刻板印象的潜在影响,这本书可能会更有力。作者积累了丰富的知识,最紧凑地收集在“附录G”中,他们的注释列表中有近1000部电影,按精神病理学主题组织,每部电影都获得了作者的5分评价,即电影作为教学电影和艺术作品的价值。他们还维护一个网站,在http://mimh.edu/danny_wedding上提供这些信息并定期更新。这本书唯一的缺点是没有索引。我发现这本书在给精神科住院医生上抑郁症心理动力学课时很有用,我在课上放了一段《沙与雾之家》的片段,是受这本书中关于情绪障碍的章节的启发。我还用这本书为一个对身心医学感兴趣的医科学生的网站挑选电影和笔记。在《电影与精神疾病》的帮助下,精神病理学的学习和教学应该变得更有趣、更生动、更有效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信