Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health
Health & Fitness:Mental Health
Lynne Layton is a psychoanalyst in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and part-time assistant clinical professor of psychology at Harvard Medical School. Holding a Ph.D. in clinical psychology as well as comparative literature, she has taught courses on gender, popular culture, and psychoanalysis for Harvard’s Committee on Degrees in Women’s Studies and Social Studies. Currently, she teaches and supervises at the Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis.
She recently published a book called Towards a Social Psychoanalysis: Culture, Character, and Normative Unconscious Processes and is the author of Who’s That Girl? Who’s That Boy? Clinical Practice Meets Postmodern Gender Theory(2004). She was also the co-editor of the books Narcissism and the Text: Studies in Literature and the Psychology of Self, Bringing the Plague: Toward a Postmodern Psychoanalysis, and Psychoanalysis, Class and Politics: Encounters in the Clinical Setting. Her involvement in editing peer-reviewed journals includes being the associate editor of the journal Psychoanalytic Dialogues and the former co-editor of the journal Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society.
She is the past president of Section IX, Division 39 of the American Psychological Association, Psychoanalysis for Social Responsibility, and co-founder of the Boston Psychosocial Work Group and Reflective Spaces/Material Places-Boston, a group of psychodynamic therapists committed to community mental health and social justice. She is also on the organizing committee for Grassroots Reparations Campaign, an organization working towards building a culture of repair.
In this interview, Layton discusses social psychoanalysis. She explores how her construct of "normative unconscious processes" can illuminate how oppressive systems are continually internalized and reproduced, both inside and outside the clinic.
Lillian Comas-Diaz - Addressing the Roots of Racial Trauma
Derek Blumke – The Mad in America Veterans Initiative
Craig Wiener - ADHD, A Return to Psychology
Pat Bracken - Toward a Critical Self-Reflective Psychiatry
Diana Kopua - Learning a Different Way
World Benzodiazepine Awareness Day 2019 - Part 2
World Benzodiazepine Awareness Day 2019 - Part 1
Lucy Johnstone - The Creation of a Conceptual Alternative to the DSM
Lee Coleman - Breaking Out of the Circle - Creating a Non-violent Revolution
Felicity Thomas and Richard Byng - Poverty, Pathology and Pills
Adriane Fugh-Berman - Getting Pharma Out of Medical Education
David Cohen - Mad Science, Psychiatric Coercion and the Therapeutic State
John Read - Fighting for the Meaning of Madness
Lee Coleman – The Insanity Defence, Storytelling on the Witness Stand
Jonathan Raskin - Constructing Alternatives to the DSM
Kelly Brogan - The Science and Pseudoscience of Women’s Mental Health
Vance Trudeau - Antidepressant Exposure Across Generations
Lee Coleman - The Reign of Error
Mark Horowitz - Peer-Support Groups Were Right, Guidelines Were Wrong - Tapering Off Antidepressants
Gail Hornstein - First-Person Accounts of Madness and Global Mental Health
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Good Mood Revolution
Mental Health Insights
MQ Open Mind
Speaking of Suicide
The Suicide Prevention Movement
Depression Talks Podcast