No Cover Image

Book chapter 1202 views

Self-esteem, happiness and the therapeutic fad cycle

Ashley Frawley Orcid Logo

The Routledge International Handbook of Global Therapeutic Cultures, Pages: 139 - 152

Swansea University Author: Ashley Frawley Orcid Logo

Full text not available from this repository: check for access using links below.

DOI (Published version): https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429024764

Abstract

In this contribution, I explore strong parallels across emotions as social issues in terms of advocacy, rhetoric and marked tendencies to rise, expand and give way to new vocabularies which nonetheless mark out very similar claims. In particular, I sketch out the cyclic nature of therapeutic fads su...

Full description

Published in: The Routledge International Handbook of Global Therapeutic Cultures
Published: London Routledge 2020
Online Access: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9780429024764
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa54785
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract: In this contribution, I explore strong parallels across emotions as social issues in terms of advocacy, rhetoric and marked tendencies to rise, expand and give way to new vocabularies which nonetheless mark out very similar claims. In particular, I sketch out the cyclic nature of therapeutic fads surrounding self-esteem and happiness. As self-esteem was questioned as a panacea for social problems, happiness emerged as a powerful new discourse that performed very similar functions. Focusing on these cases, I draw on my earlier research on the construction of happiness as a social problem (Frawley, 2015, 2018) and Hewitt’s (1998) study of self-esteem to illustrate a growing tendency to problematise apparently positive emotional signifiers. Beginning with a discussion of fads and social problem cycles, I move to a discussion of ethnopsychology, or cultural assumptions about human psychology and human nature. I then describe key aspects of therapeutic fad cycles focusing on happiness and self-esteem as problematised positive emotional signifiers, from a ‘prehistory’ phase to discovery, adoption, expansion and exhaustion.
Keywords: social problems, happiness, self-esteem, social construction, therapy culture, fads
College: Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Start Page: 139
End Page: 152