How can we reimagine mental health care and its radical possibilities in the context of its global development under capitalism?
The contemporary world is oversaturated with new psychiatric programs, methods, and reforms promising to address any number of "crises" in mental health care. When they fail, alternatives to the alternatives simply pile up and seem to lead nowhere. In STORMING BEDLAM: MADNESS, UTOPIA, AND REVOLT, Sasha Warren suggests that the intense contradictions that animate psychiatric care can only be conceptualized by situating its technical composition in its actual social, political, and economic conditions.
Chronicling and comparing these movements, STORMING BEDLAM argues that long standing divisions between social and biological approaches or between psychiatry and anti-psychiatry as discrete positions are tenuous and circular. Instead of avoiding these binaries, Warren travels through them, using their own internal logics to expose their hidden presuppositions in search of an approach to mental health care grounded in common struggles against conditions of scarcity, poverty, isolation, and exploitation.
Sasha Warren is a writer and mental health worker living in Minneapolis. He writes on psychiatric history, policy, and law on his substack Of Unsound Mind. In March, 2024, he released his first book STORMING BEDLAM: MADNESS, UTOPIA, AND REVOLT on the history of revolutionary and reactionary psychiatry with Common Notions. He is the cofounder of various projects focused on mental health: the Minnesota chapter of the International Society for Social and Psychological Approaches to Psychosis, the Network of Alternatives to Psychiatry, and Hearing Voices Twin Cities.