A review by lupetuple
Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates by Erving Goffman

5.0

A very incisive look into the dehumanizing conditions of institutions, particularly mental hospitals. This is an old text but having been in a psych ward in the 21st century I can pretty much say "Yeah" to a lot of what this guy observed. One observation that is still in my mind is his assertion that mental patients are committed not because of mental illness but because of "contingencies," such as crises within the family or workplace. I also really liked his remarks on the fragmentation of the self, how the mental patient perceives themself in relation to what the institution forces and expects of them, how their surroundings and their parameters influence their perceptions and feelings. There's also a lot of implications that behaviors associated with "psychosis," for example," are really reactions to being contained in a regimented facility with little freedom.

It was a little tedious but I'm guessing that's due to my little experience with reading sociological texts. Otherwise it's a very good assessment of the nature of institutions and how they make their mark on the individual, especially mental patients. It was also hard to understand but I think I got the gist of what he was trying to get at. I'd say it's still a relevant text if you want to get a look at how psych hospitals are devastating to one's identity and place in society. The first part of the text is a good argument for abolition of the institution in general, particularly prisons.