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BOOK
REVIEW
JOURNAL
OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE
Vol. 42(3), September 1940
ALCOHOLICS
ANONYMOUS: How more than one hundred men have recovered
from alcoholism. (New York: Works Publishing Company, Church
St. Annex P.C., $3.50.)
As
a youth we attended many "experience" meetings
more as an onlooker than as a participant. We never could
work ourselves up into a lather and burst forth in soapy
bubbly phrases about our intimate states of feeling. That
was our own business rather than something to brag about
to the neighbours. Neither then nor now do we lean to the
autobiographical, save occasionally by allusion to point
a moral or adorn a tale, as the ancient adage put it.
This
big book, i.e. big in words, is a rambling sort of camp
meeting confession of experiences, told in the form of biographies
of various alcoholics who had been to a certain institution
and have provisionally recovered, chiefly under the influence
of the "big brothers get together spirit." Of
the inner meaning of alcoholism there is hardly a word.
It is all on the surface material.
Inasmuch
as the alcoholic, speaking generally, lives a wish-fulfilling
infantile regression to the omnipotent delusional state,
perhaps he is best handled for the time being at least by
regressive mass psychological methods, in which, as is realized,
religious fervors belong, hence the religious trend of the
book . Billy Sunday and similar orators had their successes
but we think the methods of Forel and of Bleuler infinitely
superior.
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