Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
Volume 24, Issue 2 , Pages 114-124, April 2010

Challenging Normative Orthodoxies in Depression: Huxley's Utopia or Dante's Inferno?

  • John R. Cutcliffe

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding Author: John R. Cutcliffe, Bsc (Hon) Nrsg, PhD, RMN, RGN, RN, RPN, Professor of Nursing, College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Tyler, TX 75799.
  • ,
  • Richard Lakeman

University of Texas (Tyler), TX

Stenberg College, Vancouver, Canada

University of Ulster, United Kingdom

Dublin City University, Ireland

published online 16 October 2009.

Although there appears to be a widespread consensus that depression is a ubiquitous human experience, definitions of depression, its prevalence, and how mental health services respond to it have changed significantly over time, particularly during recent decades. Epistemological limitations notwithstanding, it is now estimated that approximately 121 million people experience depression. At the same time, it should be acknowledged that the last two decades have seen the widespread acceptance of depression as a chemical imbalance and a massive corresponding increase in the prescription of antidepressants, most notably of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). However, questions have been raised about the effectiveness and iatrogenic side effects of antidepressants; related questions have also been asked about whose interests are served by the marketing and sales of these drugs. Accordingly, this article attempts to problematize the normative orthodoxy concerning depression and creates a “space” in which an alternative can be articulated and enacted. In so doing, the article finds that the search for a world where the automatic response to depression is a pharmacological intervention not only ignores the use of alternative efficacious treatment options but may also inhibit the persons' chance to explore the meaning of their experience and thus prevent people from individual growth and personal development. Interestingly, in worlds analogous to this pharmacologically induced depression-free state, such as utopias like that in Huxley's Brave New World, no “properly conditioned citizen” is depressed or suicidal. Yet, in the same Brave New World, no one is free to suffer, to be different, or crucially, to be independent.

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 This article was based on a presentation the first author was invited to deliver at the 29th Congress of the International Academy of Law and Mental Health held in Paris 2005.

PII: S0883-9417(09)00088-0

doi:10.1016/j.apnu.2009.06.004

Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
Volume 24, Issue 2 , Pages 114-124, April 2010