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Case Reports
. 1977;1(4):395-412.
doi: 10.1007/BF00116245.

Cultural adaptability as an attribute of therapies: the case of Morita psychotherapy

Case Reports

Cultural adaptability as an attribute of therapies: the case of Morita psychotherapy

D K Reynolds et al. Cult Med Psychiatry. 1977.

Abstract

Morita psychotherapy, a form of therapy developed in Japan some sixty years ago, has survived extensive changes in Japanese society, and is now enjoying popularity in the United States. This gives us an opportunity to look closely at the concept of 'cultural fit' between an important therapeutic technique and its social milieu, and to speculate about recent changes in American culture that may account for the growing popularity of Moritism. In contrast to Western style 'talking therapies' like psychoanalysis, Morita psychotherapy is relatively group-centered, ritualistic, and behavioristic. On would expect to find these features in a Japanese therapy, but their acceptance in America suggests that previously popular Western techniques may not be optimum for handling certain problems of the post-industrial American. McLuhan, Peacock, Douglas, and others have suggested some emerging traits of Western character that might shed some light on this question.

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