Culture | The pill machine
Dispatches from the struggle to treat mental illness
In “Strangers to Ourselves”, Rachel Aviv explores “unsettled minds”
Strangers to Ourselves. By Rachel Aviv. Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 288 pages; $28. To be published in Britain by Harvill Secker in October; £18.99
This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “The pill machine”
Culture September 17th 2022
- “The Crown” will help shape the memory of Queen Elizabeth II
- Italians’ memories of Fascism are dangerously inaccurate
- Mooncakes, an ancient tradition, are constant yet variable
- More people mean more innovation, not just more consumption
- Dispatches from the struggle to treat mental illness
- “The Waste Land” is a case study of great art by flawed artists
More from Culture
Performing in a cinema near you: Bob Dylan and Maria Callas
Behind the boom in musical biopics
Can Magnus Carlsen convince people to watch chess?
The world’s best player hopes that glamming up the ancient game can make stars of its players
Are internet firms the problem, or are you the problem?
A veteran critic of technology offers his take on a familiar target
The Michelin Guide is no longer the only tastemaker in town
How is it adapting to changing eating habits?
Why “Emilia Pérez” is loved by Hollywood and hated by everyone else
And the Oscar for Worst Picture goes to…
Tofu: never judge a food by its political reputation
Think outside the white plastic box. Here is a carnivore’s guide to tofu