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People Who Play God: How Ultra-Authorities Enslave the Hearts, Minds, and
Souls of Their Victims
B. E. Peterson
Philadelphia PA: Xlibris, 2003. ISBN 141341642X (paperback),
395 pages, $22.95
Reviewed by
Frank MacHovec, Ph.D.
This book is one of many written by people who feel
compelled to share personal experiences that have affected their mental health.
In the Preface, the author confides she was victimized by an “ultra-authority,”
and, unlike “anyone limited to academic research or even therapeutic work with
survivors,” she has “been there,” has been “healed,” and the book has been “part
of that healing process.” This perspective suggests research is of little use,
and psychotherapy ineffective, unless the therapist has had the treated
condition.
Because the book is one person’s experience and
interpretation, the content is anecdotal, subjective, and may not be applicable
to others. Then again, the author presumes expertise based on “a continually
growing number of years of research, experience, observation, and intense
thought and internal exploration,” and “the invaluable work done by others.” And
on page 25, she proposes “Peterson’s integrated model of ultra-authority.”
The book contains 14 chapters, some with as few as two
pages (e.g., Chapter 7); other chapters contain as many as 48 pages (e.g.,
Chapter 9). Some chapters are so brief they barely touch on a subject. Others
are overly detailed, such as chapters on Manson, Jones, and Hitler. Throughout
the book, figures are given and seemingly factual statements are made without
citing sources. This lack of source citation makes separating the author’s
opinion or interpretation from objective fact or researched data difficult.
Citations also would have helped to provide some basis for the author’s sweeping
generalizations, such as “It is well documented...” (page 385).
The book ends with a Suggested Reading list of seven books
and a 5-page Selected Bibliography of 40 titles, most of them more than 20 years
old; only one title is as recent as 2000. The material would have benefited from
the many more-recent articles and books on authority figures and their influence
on others. There is no index.
Advice the author gives readers seems sound but is based on
one person’s experience rather than on studies of many cases treated by compared
therapies. The list of five persons to “stay away from” refers only to those who
use obvious manipulation and omits those whose subtle, covert methods are more
difficult to detect.
The material would have been more helpful if the author had
encouraged readers to consult a mental-health professional if they cannot cope
alone. The advice to “become your own personal authority” (page 385) is ironic.
That kind of thinking has contributed to the development of “ultra authorities.”
The book lacks references to the substantial body of
clinical and empirical research and therapies used on similar cases. It does not
make a significant contribution to clinical or research literature. What it
contains can be found elsewhere, in already-published articles and books.
However, the author is to be complimented for processing the pain she endured
from an “ultra authority” and finding her way back to mental health and a
meaningful life. What she shares can help readers understand how authority
figures can misinform and even lead individuals to mental disorder, suicide, or
the infliction of violence on others.
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