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The book is structured around four primary locations where Americanized concepts of mental health were introduced:
: Watters describes how a 1994 tragedy involving a young girl's death led to the introduction of Western diagnostic criteria. Before this, local cases of self-starvation didn't typically involve "fat phobia" or body dysmorphia; after American experts were cited in the media, the disorder began to mirror American symptoms. Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the America...
: Following the 2004 tsunami, Western trauma counselors flooded the region, often ignoring local communal rituals for grief. By focusing on individualistic Western PTSD models, they inadvertently pathologized traditional coping mechanisms. The book is structured around four primary locations
: Watters notes that individuals with schizophrenia in traditional cultures often have better long-term outcomes than those in the U.S.. He argues that the Western "brain disease" model can increase social stigma compared to local explanations (like spirit possession) that keep the sufferer integrated into their family. By focusing on individualistic Western PTSD models, they
: This chapter details a massive marketing campaign by pharmaceutical companies to redefine sadness as "a cold of the soul" to create a market for antidepressants. This shift replaced a cultural view that found philosophical value in melancholy with a biomedical one requiring medication. Central Arguments Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche