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THE DEVIL'S CASTLE

Susanne Antonetta

Eugenics, Nazi Euthanasia, and How Psychiatry's Troubled History Hurts Us Now

Seamlessly blending psychology, neuroscience, history, and personal memoir, THE DEVIL'S CASTLE explores the intersection of madness and modern history, challenging our understanding of mental states like psychosis and depression.
In 1939, as the eugenics movement surged throughout the West, Nazi Germany transformed five asylums and an abandoned jail into gas chambers. The ghastly killing methods of the Holocaust began for the purpose of killing neuropsychiatric victimsthough euthanasia became the first Nazi killing program to target Jews, as well, by defining them as "sick." Eugenic thinking didn't just survive but thrived, during and after the war, a stark contrast to the humane "moral treatment" that began in late 18th century mind care.

Three personal stories serve as counterpoints to the eugenics story: the author's, and historical figures Paul Schreber and Dorothea Buck. Schreber was a German judge who lived in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, who had been committed to Sonnenstein, by then a failing institution, for life. He fought his permanent commitment in court, representing himself and arguing for the value of his mind. Remarkably, he won.

Dorothea Buck was a diagnosed schizophrenic and Nazi victim, sterilized in 1936 under the Hereditary Health laws. She was also a sculptor, whose work focused on images of mothers and children. Buck became a lifelong activist, demanding recognition of the Nazi crimes. The "trialogue" seminars she created for mental care offer a lifeline to the millions failed by today's psychiatry.

Both Buck and Schreber saw what others did not. At eighteen Buck heard a voice telling her Hitler's war would be "monstrous," and tried to warn the adults around her. When Schreber arrived at Sonnenstein, not yet a killing center, he said it "reeked of corpses" and voices told him its name: The Devil's Castle.

Antonetta's own story begins with psychiatric abuse and the threat of lifelong institutionalization. It moves into the author's discovery of "mad mentors" Buck and Schreber. She absorbs their writings, interviews those who knew Buck, travels to Germany to find them.

Evocatively written and impeccably researched, THE DEVIL'S CASTLE looks to the past to explain how, as a culture, we continue to get mind care so wrong and how we might reshape assumptions to get it right. It offers a new way of thinking about not just madness but consciousness itselfa new way of living whole.

Susanne Antonetta is an award-winning poet, memoirist, and author of non-fiction who writes and speaks about neuro-difference, science, and the environment for a wide variety of audiences. In addition to The Devil's Castle, she is also the author of Entangled Objects, Make Me a Mother, Curious Atoms: A History with Physics, Body Toxic, A Mind Apart, and four books of poetry. Her work continually garners high praise. Awards for her writing include a New York Times Notable Book, an American Book Award, a Library Journal Best Science book of the year, an Oprah Bookshelf listing, and others. Her essays and poems have appeared in The New York Times, Ms., The Huffington Post, The UK Independent, The Hill, Orion, Psychology Today, The New Republic, and other publications, and featured on CNN. She was recently a subject of a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's Ideas radio documentary, "The Myth of Normal."
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Published 2025-10-01 by Counterpoint Press

Comments

Susanne Antonetta draws memories from histories of oppression, violence and brutality in past psychiatry in Europe. And she connects these to the contemporary state of psychiatry in a personally driven narrative. This is an obligatory page-turner for anyone interested in the downside of the smug success stories of medical science.

The Devil's Castle is an essential read for anyone seeking to understand the deeper complexities of the Holocaust and the historical context that allowed such horrors to unfold. It is a compelling and necessary addition to the discourse on human rights and dignity. Prepare to be challenged, moved, and forever changed by this extraordinary work.

In The Devil's Castle, which no one else could have written, Susanne Antonetta uses, like her heroes Paul Schreber and Dorothea Buck, her own "mad career" to advocate "letting go of the madness of fearing madness." Only by confronting the murderous inhumanity of German and American eugenics and by acknowledging their all too living embers in the fireplace of contemporary psychiatry, can we leave the pathology paradigm for good. It's an extraordinary book.

Susanne Antonetta has been awarded for her writing by a New York Times Notable Book, an American Book Award and a Library Journal Best Science book of the year.

Susanne Antonetta treats the darkest and most persistently dangerous foundations of neuronormative humanity with a combination of terrifying clarity and redemptive tenderness. I would, without hyperbole, call her the greatest writer of the century -- but her encompassing expressions defy human ideas of time and space.