I was so excited to order and receive this book and, when I began reading it, almost tore through the pages. The writing is very engaging and emotionally charged; it hits you right in the gut and stokes flames of outrage and the desire to help fight a deeply flawed system. The more I read, however, the more skeptical I became.
Here's the thing: the idea that psychiatry as a patriarchal institution that is actively misogynist - and is also andro- and Eurocentric - is not novel. This is a not a new premise and this book offers no new insights. It is, however, presented by the author as somehow revolutionary. Taylor is not the first to put these concepts together, but her writing style is provocative and inflammatory ... and I really enjoy it. Her prose is charged and effective.
That said, it's fairly obvious why this isn't an academic publication. There is a reference list at the end of the book and a few studies cited throughout, but not enough to buttress her arguments. There is no separate works cited or even an annotated bibliography.
The book is centered almost exclusively on the author's own research conducted by her at her institute - fine, but that means there is no oversight or peer-review. Outside of limited sources narrowed in scope, the evidence presented is primarily anecdotal or self-reported. I personally believe that victims rarely lie, so I accept the accounts as they are given; however, had I realized this prior to purchasing, I most likely would have sought out a library copy. This book is a collection of disclosures by victims who were then further traumatized by an archaic system that often doesn't know how or care to help them.
Further, it is worth noting that the author is not a clinical psychologist, but a forensic psychologist who earned her doctorate in a research track. It might not matter to everyone, but it does to me. The author is not a clinician and has not been in practice as such. Therefore, when she denounces completely the idea of mental illness - which she does; she is an absolutist - as having no genetic basis and all completely induced by trauma, I find this dangerous.
Do I believe that psychiatry has actively overmedicated and pathologized women for the sole purpose of shutting them up? I do, absolutely. I also believe psychiatry, as an institution, was conceived with the idea of white supremacy. Again, these are not new ideas. Yes, women are disproportionately diagnosed with BPD and bipolar disorder, but men are also diagnosed with these disorders, yet the author does not comment on such cases. Further, her assertion that all mental health issues stem from trauma, primarily sexual trauma, just isn't supportable. She rails against the idea of neurotransmitter chemical imbalances, arguing there is no medical test that can prove such a hypothesis. Likewise, there is no proof she can offer that all mental illness is the result of childhood trauma.
I do not believe that all mental diagnoses are claptrap and psychopharmalogical intervention is equivalent to malfeasance. What concerns me are the people who might read this and feel unseen or abandoned by the systems and professionals meant to protect and aid them, and stop taking their medication(s) without supervision. The author displays little to no understanding of pharmacokinetics, and her assertion that these medications are unnecessary (and her denial that they can be life-saving) is alarming.
I was about three-quarters through the book when I decided I needed to learn more about the author, as I was becoming more concerned by her blanket declarations that had absolutely no evidentiary support. I suggest a Google search, as there's a lot that will turn up, including accusations of former clients/patients who claim their stories were used without consent for the author's profit. She sends her large social media following after those who merely question her observations. She makes unfounded, absolutist claims and, when challenged, complains about being the victim of misogyny and homophobia. I'm not saying she hasn't been, but you can't claim those as excuses because your mouth wrote checks your research can't cash.
I wanted to give this one-star, and I probably should have, but the style is engaging and the topics raised are important. I hope this book spurs conversation, but for the right reasons. Alas, I believe all the research into the author and her methodologies will preclude the important and urgent arguments she was attempting to put forward.