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Those identifying as LGBTQ+ experience an excess of mental health problems and suicide in our society, and their mental health needs are poorly catered for. In the recent past, aversion therapy was given to lesbian and transwomen and conversion therapy remains legal. The ‘gender wars’ have also opened up spaces within society and feminism that can be difficult to negotiate. For transwomen, timely access to adequate care remains a major problem causing considerable emotional distress while public anti-trans sentiment has increased. Repeated denial of the lived experience of trans people is causing psychological harm. The rise in gender dysphoria in assigned female at birth (AFAB; or natal female) girls and their treatment has caused major controvery. We must to acknowledge both the distress of trans people, who feel frustrated and angry at having to jump through the hoops of psychiatric assessment and being blamed for male violence from which they are also at risk, and the distress and fear of women who have been conditioned lifelong to fear, and/or have experienced violence, at losing their safe spaces. Seeking ways to ensure that everyone feels welcomed not only in services but also in society.
Anthony Burgess’ novel ‘Clockwork Orange’ identifies the topical debates surrounding the use of aversion therapy (or aversive conditioning) as an effective treatment for addictive behaviours. Widely popularised in literature as ‘Ludovico’s Technique’, Burgess attempts to credit the misunderstanding and dramatization of its effects when the main protagonist is released from a prison sentence after undergoing this treatment.
Objectives
We aimed to highlight the depictions of aversion therapy in modern popular literature.
Methods
A narrative review of the current literature concerning aversion therapy and Anthony Burgess’s novel ‘A Clockwork Orange’ was conducted. Emphasis on the misinterpretation of aversive therapies was noted.
Results
Since the introduction of pharmacological alternatives and additional forms of psychological therapies, there has been a decline in the use of aversion therapy in recent decades. However, it is still effective when conceding the conditioning process. Likewise, its predecessor’ visual imagery’ is believed to be a more acceptable and effective form.
Conclusions
The depiction of aversion therapy in literature and media has played a role in shaping societal views on aversive conditioning techniques and the degree to which they are deemed acceptable forms of treatment. The “Ludovico Technique” featured in the novel ‘A Clockwork Orange’ and its film adaptation is arguably the most salient depiction of aversion therapy in popular culture.
Conditioning affects a wide range of behaviors, far beyond just salivation. One is how we react to painful stimuli. Our bodies work to maintain internal states within safe limits (homeostasis), and conditioning allows us to anticipate painful stimuli, and to take action to counteract them. Conditioning also affects a wide range of emotions, including fear, hunger, sexual arousal, and cravings for alcohol and drugs. And conditioning can also be used to treat problems involving these emotions. In aversion therapy, exposure to alcohol is followed by inducd illness; by creating an aversion to alcohol, this therapy has had considerable success in treating alcoholism. Conditioning has also been used to treat phobias. Phobias often develop through conditioning, and conditioning principles can be used to overcome them. In exposure therapies such as systematic desensitization, the feared stimulus is presented and not followed by harmful consequences (in one variant, virtual reality therapy, the stimuli are presented through virtual reality headsets). The aim is to extinguish the fear, and this treatment too has had considerable success.
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