Could a film like Summer of ’42 be made today? No.
The movie depicts a fifteen year old boy who has a sexual encounter with a woman in her twenties whose husband just died in the war. While the movie was a massive commercial and critical success in 1971, the zeitgeist presents several obstacles that make such a production unlikely.
Due to the triumph of the Mental Health Industrial Complex, our time moralizes the age of consent and the concept of “grooming.” In the 1970s, many viewed the encounter as a bittersweet rite of passage or a moment of mutual comfort between two lonely souls. Today, audiences and critics would likely view the relationship through a clinical or legal lens. The age gap and the power asymmetry between a grieving adult and a minor would shift the genre from a nostalgic coming of age drama to a psychological thriller or a legal procedural.
The aesthetic of nostalgia has also changed. Modern cinema often deconstructs the past rather than romanticizing it. Summer of ’42 relies on a soft focus, sentimental view of wartime adolescence. Current sensibilities tend to prefer a more gritty or skeptical approach to history. A director today would likely feel pressure to highlight the trauma or the moral failure of the adult character, whereas the original film treats the event as a foundational, poetic memory for the protagonist.
Marketing such a film would present a significant challenge for a major studio. The risk of a public relations backlash on social media is high when the plot includes sexual activity with a minor. Most studios avoid scripts that might invite accusations of glamorizing statutory issues. Independent cinema might still tackle these themes, but it would lack the broad, mainstream “prestige” treatment that the original received.
That a film so centered on a teenager’s sexual pursuit of an older woman was once considered wholesome family viewing shows how much our collective morality has shifted. The symmetry between the boy’s loss of innocence and the woman’s loss of her husband provided the emotional weight of the 1971 version. In 2026, the logic of the story would almost certainly collapse under the weight of modern ethical standards and legal definitions.
The final scene of Summer of ’42 leaves Hermie on the beach, his childhood effectively ended by a single night of shared grief and sexuality. Dorothy leaves the island the next morning, leaving only a note. Because the story is told as a memory by an older, adult Hermie, we can deduce certain paths for these characters based on the social logic of the mid-twentieth century and the specific traits they show in the film.
A few more points.
First, the sexual revolution context. Summer of ’42 emerged at the exact moment when Hollywood was absorbing the aftershocks of the 1960s sexual revolution. The late 1960s and early 1970s temporarily loosened long-standing taboos about sexuality in film. Movies like The Graduate, Last Tango in Paris, and Midnight Cowboy explored sexual relationships that had previously been considered unfilmable.
In that environment, the Hermie-Dorothy encounter could be framed as wistful and poetic rather than predatory. The cultural mood assumed that sexual experience was liberating rather than inherently dangerous.
That assumption has largely reversed. The dominant cultural lens now interprets sexual relationships primarily through the framework of power imbalance and exploitation.
Second, the decline of the “male initiation” narrative. For much of the twentieth century, Western storytelling contained a familiar structure: a young man becomes an adult through some intense initiation. Sometimes it was war. Sometimes sex. Sometimes violence.
Older woman initiations were a recurring trope. They appear in novels, memoirs, and films throughout the twentieth century. The encounter was understood as a moment where the boy crossed a threshold into adulthood.
That narrative has almost disappeared from mainstream culture. Contemporary storytelling is far more comfortable portraying young women’s coming-of-age experiences than young men’s sexual initiation. When male initiation appears now, it is usually framed as danger or victimization rather than maturation.
Third, the disappearance of ambiguity. One of the striking things about Summer of ’42 is that the film refuses to explain the encounter morally. Dorothy is not portrayed as a villain. Hermie is not portrayed as a victim. The moment is simply presented as a complicated human event.
Modern film culture is much less tolerant of that ambiguity. Contemporary audiences often expect characters to be clearly coded as victim, perpetrator, or survivor. Stories that refuse those categories can generate intense backlash.
The ambiguity that once gave the film its emotional depth now reads to many viewers as moral evasion.
Fourth, the shift from memory culture to trauma culture. Earlier films were comfortable treating painful experiences as formative memories. The adult narrator of Summer of ’42 treats the event as something that shaped his sensibility.
Modern culture often encourages people to interpret difficult experiences through the language of trauma and healing. That language changes how stories are told. Instead of asking “How did this experience shape the person?” the story asks “How was the person harmed?”
That change alters the emotional architecture of storytelling.
Fifth, Hollywood’s structural risk aversion. It is not only moral climate that prevents films like Summer of ’42. The economics of the film industry have changed dramatically. In the early 1970s, studios were willing to finance relatively small, character-driven films aimed at adults. Today, large studios concentrate on global franchises and intellectual property. A quiet coming-of-age drama with controversial sexual themes would struggle to secure financing regardless of ideology.
Independent cinema could still make such a film, but it would not become a mainstream cultural event in the way Summer of ’42 did.
Sixth, the gender reversal problem. An interesting test of cultural norms is the reverse scenario. A fifteen-year-old girl and a man in his twenties. In 1971 that story would have been seen as scandalous or predatory. The fact that Summer of ’42 inverted the genders made the encounter culturally permissible. Today the gap between those reactions has narrowed. The modern cultural framework increasingly treats both situations as comparable violations.
That shift reveals how much contemporary morality prioritizes symmetrical rules rather than gendered expectations.
Finally, the memory question. One reason the film resonates with older viewers is that it reflects how people often remember adolescence. Many people carry memories that are complicated rather than neatly categorized as good or bad. The film preserves that ambiguity. It treats the experience as something that can be beautiful, troubling, confusing, and formative at the same time.
That kind of memory-based storytelling is increasingly rare in a culture that prefers clearer moral classifications.
So what happens to the lead characters after the film ends?
Hermie likely returns to his life in the suburbs or the city, but the symmetry of his peer group is broken. While Oscy and Benjie continue their crude, adolescent fixations on the Petting Guide, Hermie carries a secret that separates him from them. He probably finishes high school and serves in the latter part of World War II or the Korean War. The narrator’s voice suggests he becomes a man of reflection, perhaps a writer or a professional who view his past through a lens of soft-focus melancholy. He never sees Dorothy again, as the power of the memory relies on her remaining a ghost of a single summer.
Dorothy faces a much harder reality. She is a young war widow in 1942. After leaving the island, she likely returns to her family or her husband’s family to navigate the bureaucracy of military death benefits and funeral arrangements. In the social climate of the 1940s, a young widow was often expected to mourn privately and eventually remarry. The note she leaves for Hermie suggests she felt a profound sense of shame or at least a realization that her lapse in judgment could not be part of her “real” life. She likely buries the memory of that night, perhaps viewing it later in life as a moment of temporary madness brought on by the shock of her husband’s death.
Oscy and Benjie likely follow the standard trajectory of the “Greatest Generation.” Oscy’s bravado probably translates well into military service or a sales career, where his aggressive pursuit of goals remains a defining trait. Benjie, the most anxious of the trio, likely finds stability in a technical or administrative field, finally finding the “logic” of life that eluded him during that confusing summer on the island.
The most certain outcome is that the “Terrible Trio” dissolves. That summer is the peak of their collective innocence. Once Hermie crosses the threshold into the adult world through Dorothy, the interplay of their friendship changes. They might stay in touch, but the specific, desperate bond of puberty is gone. Hermie moves through life as a “buffered” individual, keeping the porous vulnerability of that summer hidden behind the persona of a successful adult.
The narrator’s closing monologue in Summer of ’42 serves as the definitive lens for Hermie’s entire adult life. He speaks with a voice of detached, poetic reflection. This suggests he transformed his experience not into a source of trauma, but into a permanent internal monument. He describes the events as something he “lost” and “found” simultaneously, which indicates a man who lives with a constant sense of the ephemeral.
His adult life is likely characterized by a “buffered” emotional state. By moving through that specific rite of passage under such heavy circumstances, he likely developed a heightened sensitivity that his peers, like Oscy, lack. The monologue shows he values the aesthetic of a memory as much as the reality of it. He does not seek out Dorothy as an adult because doing so would break the logic of the “perfect” tragedy. He prefers the ghost to the woman.
The narrator’s tone also implies a certain level of isolation. He refers to the “Terrible Trio” in the past tense with a fondness that feels distant. This suggests he might not be close with his childhood friends in his later years. The shared history of Benjie and Oscy is rooted in their collective ignorance, while Hermie’s history is rooted in a solitary, secret knowledge. His adulthood is defined by that secret, making him a chronicler of his own life rather than a simple participant in it.
The symmetry of the film’s ending—the boy walking away from the house on the dunes—mirrors the adult Hermie’s approach to relationships. He likely approaches life with the expectation that profound moments are brief and followed by a “note” of departure. This creates a man who is perhaps a bit of a romantic fatalist, finding beauty in the fact that things end.
Comparing Summer of ’42 to The Last Picture Show reveals a shared obsession with the decay of innocence, but they approach the theme with a different logic. Both films arrived in 1971, a year when American cinema obsessed over the “porous” nature of the past. However, where Summer of ’42 uses a soft, golden filter of memory, The Last Picture Show uses stark black-and-white to strip away any romanticism.
In The Last Picture Show, the encounter between the young protagonist, Sonny, and the older Ruth Popper mirrors Hermie and Dorothy. The symmetry is striking: both boys seek out older women who are suffering from profound loneliness and grief. Yet, the outcome in Peter Bogdanovich’s film is much bleaker. There is no poetic narrator to wrap the experience in a “rite of passage” bow. Instead, the characters are trapped in a dying Texas town where the “picture show” literally closes, signaling the end of their world.
Hermie’s experience in Summer of ’42 is a singular, transformative event that he carries as a treasure. Sonny’s experience is a slow, grinding realization that adulthood offers no grand answers, only more complex versions of the same boredom and pain. While Hermie walks away with a “found” memory, Sonny ends the film sitting in a dusty kitchen, holding Ruth’s hand in a state of mutual, hollow exhaustion.
The two films represent two sides of the 1970s “nostalgia” coin. Summer of ’42 argues that the loss of innocence is a beautiful tragedy that defines a man. The Last Picture Show argues that the loss of innocence is simply the beginning of a long, unremarkable decline. Both films use the older woman as a bridge into the adult world, but only Hermie seems to make it across to a life of successful reflection.
The Reader (2008) is based on the 1995 novel Der Vorleser by Bernhard Schlink.
The story centers on Hanna Schmitz, a woman in her mid-thirties who begins a sexual affair with fifteen-year-old Michael Berg in post-war West Germany. Their relationship is defined by a specific ritual: before they have sex, Hanna insists that Michael read aloud to her from works of literature.
Years later, while Michael is a law student, he observes a war crimes trial and is shocked to find Hanna among the defendants. She is a former SS guard accused of allowing hundreds of Jewish women to burn to death in a locked church during a death march. The trial reveals that Hanna is illiterate—a secret she finds more shameful than her past as a concentration camp guard. She essentially admits to writing a false report to cover up the incident, accepting a life sentence simply to avoid a handwriting test that would expose her inability to read or write.
The interplay between her personal shame and her historical guilt forms the core of the film’s moral complexity. While in prison, Michael sends her tapes of himself reading books, which she uses to finally teach herself to read.
The aftermath in Summer of ’42 and The Reader reveals a sharp contrast between nostalgia as a shield and history as a haunting. While both films use a sexual initiation as the pivot point for a young man’s life, the way they process the fallout reflects the different cultural burdens they carry.
In Summer of ’42, the aftermath is internal and poetic. Hermie views the night with Dorothy as a closed loop. Because she leaves immediately, there is no messy reality to navigate. The adult Hermie uses the memory to define his transition into manhood, treating the event as a “found” treasure. The logic here is one of preservation; he keeps the memory in a soft-focus state to avoid the grit of the actual encounter. He moves on to a life where that summer remains a sacred, static artifact that explains his emotional depth but demands nothing more of him.
The Reader presents a far more destructive interplay between the personal and the political. For Michael Berg, the aftermath is a lifelong haunting that he cannot resolve. The discovery that his first lover was a participant in the Holocaust turns his “rite of passage” into a source of profound moral contamination. Unlike Hermie, who walks away with a sense of completion, Michael is stuck in a cycle of seeking and repelling Hanna. His adulthood is defined by a inability to reconcile the woman who loved literature with the woman who oversaw death.
The role of the secret also differs. In Summer of ’42, the secret is a source of quiet strength and maturity for Hermie. It is a private badge of adulthood. In The Reader, the secrets are corrosive. Hanna’s secret of illiteracy leads her to accept a life sentence for crimes she didn’t solely commit, while Michael’s secret knowledge of her illiteracy becomes a burden that prevents him from ever truly being “buffered” from the past. He is forced to become her chronicler through the tapes he sends, a role that keeps him tethered to her until her death.
Summer of ’42 suggests that such an encounter might lead to a more soulful, reflective adulthood. The Reader argues that it leads to a fragmented identity where the private self and the public history are in constant, painful conflict. Hermie finds peace in the distance, while Michael finds only a lingering, complicated grief.
None of my male friends can conceive of it being a trauma for a teenage boy to have sex with a woman in her 20s.
In the world of Summer of ’42, the encounter is framed as a “gift” or a tragic, beautiful “initiation.” The film operates on the assumption that a fifteen-year-old boy possesses the agency to navigate such a moment, and that the “interplay” of mutual loneliness justifies the act. For many men of that generation, and for my friends the “logic” of the situation is one of status or a lucky break rather than victimization.
However, the “symmetry” of this view has shifted because our modern understanding of consent and “power asymmetry” has become more “buffered” by legal and psychological definitions. Today, the social construction of this event would focus on the adult’s responsibility. The trauma, in a modern sense, is often defined not by the physical act itself but by the “porous” nature of the boundaries crossed. If a teenager is not developmentally equipped to process the emotional weight of an adult’s grief or sexual needs, the “trauma” is argued to be the long-term distortion of their understanding of intimacy and power.
In The Reader, Michael Berg’s experience shows how the construction of trauma changes when the “social” context includes a moral catastrophe like the Holocaust. His trauma is not necessarily the sex itself, but the realization that his intimate life is inextricably linked to a perpetrator of mass murder. The “interplay” between his private memory and public morality creates a fracture in his identity that he cannot repair. He is haunted not by the bed, but by the bench of the courtroom.
If the culture tells a young man he should be “proud” or “lucky,” he likely integrates the experience as a positive or neutral milestone. If the culture tells him he was “groomed” or “used,” the internal narrative often shifts toward distress. The “logic” of trauma depends heavily on the stories a society tells itself about what is “normal” and what is “violation.”
Cinema Paradiso (1988) might be my favorite movie. Both Cinema and Summer share a focus on the “porous” nature of memory, but they differ significantly in the “logic” of how the protagonist integrates the past into his adult identity. Both films function as memories told by successful, middle-aged men looking back at a formative relationship with an older mentor figure during a time of war.
The Mentor and the Initiation
In both stories, the young protagonist is guided by someone who possesses a “tacit knowledge” of the world that the boy lacks. In Summer of ’42, Dorothy provides Hermie with a sexual and emotional initiation that is sudden and tragic. In Cinema Paradiso, Alfredo provides Salvatore (Toto) with a professional and cinematic initiation that is gradual and nurturing.
The symmetry between the two films lies in the departure of the mentor. Dorothy leaves Hermie with a note, vanishing into the fog of the 1940s. Alfredo forces Toto to leave their small Sicilian village, telling him never to look back and never to succumb to nostalgia. Both mentors understand that for the boy to become a “buffered” adult, the connection to the childhood “porous” self must be severed.
Nostalgia as Treasure vs. Nostalgia as Burden
The major difference lies in the narrator’s relationship with his history. In Summer of ’42, the older Hermie treats his memory as a treasure. His monologue suggests that the loss of innocence was a “found” part of his soul. He lives in a state of soft-focus melancholy where the past is a beautiful, static artifact. There is no sense that the memory hinders his life; rather, it provides the depth that defines his adulthood.
In Cinema Paradiso, Salvatore’s relationship with the past is more complicated and perhaps aligns more closely with the “harmful dysfunction” logic. Salvatore is a world-famous filmmaker, yet he is emotionally stunted. He has followed Alfredo’s advice to “never look back,” but in doing so, he has become a man who cannot sustain a present-day relationship. His nostalgia is a repressed force that only breaks through when he returns for Alfredo’s funeral.
The Final Rituals
The endings of both films feature a ritual of “purification” through media. In Summer of ’42, the ritual is the narration itself—the act of turning the event into a poetic story. In Cinema Paradiso, the ritual is the famous “censor’s reel” of deleted kisses that Alfredo leaves for Salvatore.
When Salvatore watches the montage of kisses that were once cut from the films of his childhood, he finally allows his “buffered” exterior to break. The interplay between the flickering screen and his tears shows a man finally reconciling with the “porous” child he left behind. While Hermie finds peace in the distance of his memory, Salvatore finds a painful, cathartic reunion.
That both films were massive international successes suggests a universal human appetite for these “rites of passage” narratives. They provide a social logic for understanding how we become who we are. Summer of ’42 argues that we are the sum of our secret initiations, while Cinema Paradiso argues that we are the sum of the things we were forced to leave behind.
The shift from Dorothy in Summer of ’42 to Alfredo in Cinema Paradiso illustrates two distinct models of how a mentor prepares a young man for the world. While both roles concern the transmission of “tacit knowledge,” the social construction of these figures leads to different outcomes for the protagonists.
Dorothy is constructed as a “transitional object” in a romantic and sexual rite of passage. Her role is defined by a specific symmetry of loss: she loses a husband, and Hermie loses his childhood. However, because the encounter is sexual and involves a significant power imbalance, it is the exact type of event that the modern mental health industrial complex would rebrand as a “harmful dysfunction.” In the logic of Horwitz and Wakefield, Dorothy would be seen today as a source of trauma. Yet, in the film’s 1970s nostalgia, she is a catalyst for Hermie’s emotional depth. She allows him to become “buffered” by giving him a secret that he does not have to share with the “Terrible Trio,” effectively separating him from the herd.
In contrast, Alfredo is constructed as a paternal guardian of Salvator’s potential. He is a chronicler of Salvatore’s life, literally cutting and splicing the boy’s history. Alfredo’s mentor logic is one of “strategic abandonment.” He recognizes that Salvatore’s “porous” attachment to his small village will eventually stifle him. By banning Salvatore from returning, Alfredo forces him into a state of professional success, but at the cost of personal fragmentation.
The difference in how these men process their initiations is striking. Hermie integrates his night with Dorothy into a singular, poetic identity. Salvatore, however, experiences what Horwitz might call a “socially induced distress.” He is successful in the eyes of the world, but his internal life is a series of “subthreshold” anxieties because he was forced to suppress his past.
If we apply the “harmful dysfunction” framework, we might argue that Alfredo’s “gift” was more damaging than Dorothy’s. Dorothy gave Hermie a memory he could keep; Alfredo gave Salvatore a career he had to escape into. While the mental health industry would rush to “save” Hermie from the trauma of Dorothy, they might overlook the slow, grinding isolation of Salvatore as a mere “lifestyle choice.”
This comparison shows that whether a mentor is a lover or a father figure, the “interplay” between the youth and the elder is never neutral. It always requires a trade: the boy gains a world, but he loses the version of himself that existed before the mentor arrived.
The visual storytelling in both films uses the interplay of light and shadow to distinguish between the “buffered” reality of the present and the “porous” vulnerability of the past.
In Summer of ’42, the cinematography uses a golden, hazy filter for the memory sequences. This aesthetic choice aligns with the “social construction of nostalgia”. By washing the scenes in a warm, overexposed glow, the film visually argues that these events are not “disorders” but sacred artifacts. The light acts as a protective layer, suggesting that even though the events were heavy, they are integrated into a beautiful whole.
Cinema Paradiso uses light as a literal bridge between the characters. The beam of the film projector is the primary “chronicler” of Salvatore’s life. When the light of the projector hits the screen, it creates a “porous” space where the village can escape their post-war reality. The shadows in the projection booth are where the real intimacy between Alfredo and Toto develops. For Salvatore, the flicker of the film is a reminder of the “harmful dysfunction” of his adult isolation; it is the only place where he can see what he lost.
In both films, the final return to “normal” light signifies the closing of the memory. For Hermie, the bright, clear light of the morning beach signifies his transition to a “buffered” man who can walk away. For Salvatore, the modern, clinical lighting of his office or car contrasts sharply with the rich, deep shadows of the old cinema, emphasizing how much of his internal “logic” was sacrificed for his external success.
We now have a mental health industrial complex that maximizes trauma and mental illness to maximize their own prestige and income, even when this comes at the expense of the general public. The broadening of diagnostic categories is not merely a scientific advancement but a strategic move by a class of experts to secure their authority and economic standing.
Stephen Turner’s critique of expertise suggests that the mental health industry functions by creating a “tacit knowledge” that only they can interpret. When an industry redefines ordinary human struggles as medical trauma, it creates a permanent need for their specialized services. By framing common life events as psychologically dangerous, experts secure a privileged position where they are the only ones authorized to provide a “cure.” This expansion replaces common-sense resilience with a reliance on professional intervention, effectively turning the “porous” emotional life of the individual into a managed territory.
David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory provides a framework for how these definitions spread. According to this theory, moral and psychological beliefs often serve as “patchwork narratives” designed to mobilize support for an alliance. In this case, the mental health industrial complex forms an alliance with institutions like HR departments, schools, and legal systems. By pathologizing behavior, they provide these institutions with a “neutral” or “scientific” tool to manage conflict. This creates a symmetry of interests: the industry gains funding and prestige, while the institutions gain a sophisticated logic for social control.
Jeffrey Alexander’s work on purification rituals also applies here. The diagnosis of trauma functions as a modern ritual of “purification” or “pollution.” Once an experience is labeled as traumatic, it is marked as a specialized category of suffering that requires a specific set of secular rituals—therapy, medication, or “trigger warnings”—to resolve. The mental health industry acts as the primary chronicler of these rituals. By expanding what counts as “polluting” (traumatic), they ensure that the process of “purification” (treatment) is a lifelong necessity for a larger segment of the public.
This expansion often comes at the expense of the general public. If every discomfort is a potential trauma, the person becomes increasingly vulnerable to their environment, believing they lack the internal resources to cope without professional help. This creates a cycle where the very industry meant to help with mental illness might foster a sense of fragility to maintain its own market relevance.
In Creating Mental Illness, Allan Horwitz argues that the transition from dynamic psychiatry to diagnostic psychiatry in the 1970s was a cognitive revolution that prioritized institutional legitimacy over clinical validity.
The mental health industrial complex functions through several specific mechanisms to maintain its prestige and income: That categorical illnesses like those in the DSM-III are not natural entities but social constructions designed to meet the economic and professional needs of psychiatrists. By framing ordinary human unhappiness as discrete medical conditions, the industry creates a permanent demand for specialized services. This reclassification allows mental health professionals to claim a medical legitimacy that wards off non-medical competition.
That institutions like the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and pharmaceutical companies benefit from high prevalence estimates. For example, community studies using symptom-based logic often generate inflated rates of disorder, such as the claim that 50 million Americans suffer from mental illnesses each year. These “social facts” are then used to justify increased government funding and to expand the market for psychotropic medications.
That the industry uses a “symptom-based logic” that intentionally conflates normal responses to stressful environments with internal psychological dysfunctions. A person experiencing two weeks of sadness after a job loss might meet the criteria for Major Depression in a survey, even if they are responding normally to their situation. This over-counting serves the alliance between clinicians and researchers by creating a “public health crisis” that only their expertise can address.
That the industry acts as a chronicler of a shared culture where professionals and clients alike participate in the “medicalization of distress”. Powerful advocacy groups like the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI) support the brain-disease model because it destigmatizes conditions and relieves parental responsibility, providing a moral justification for the industry’s expansion.
This industrial complex maximizes its own standing by eroding individual resilience and replacing it with a lifelong reliance on professional “purification” through therapy and medication. The result is a system that overestimates the amount of mental disorder to justify its own growth, often at the expense of the general public’s sense of agency.
The inclusion of All We Have to Fear: Psychiatry’s Transformation of Natural Anxieties into Mental Disorders by Allan Horwitz and Jerome Wakefield provides the final piece of the logic regarding the “social construction of trauma.” Their work argues that the mental health industrial complex specifically targets “natural anxieties”—biological survival mechanisms—and rebrands them as disorders. This transformation completes the process of maximizing institutional prestige by pathologizing the very instincts that once ensured human resilience.
Psychiatry often ignores the “context” of an emotional response. Horwitz and Wakefield argue that fear and anxiety are evolutionary adaptations meant to protect us from danger. When the mental health complex removes the context—such as the intense social or historical pressure of a wartime summer or a post-war trial—it can label any strong emotional reaction as a “dysfunction.” By ignoring the symmetry between a stressful environment and a stressful feeling, they create an endless supply of “disorders” from what are actually “normal” human experiences.
The book highlights how the definition of PTSD and other anxiety disorders has expanded to include “vicarious” or “secondary” trauma. This is a primary example of the “porous” nature of modern diagnosis. By suggesting that one can be traumatized by events they did not even personally experience, the industry ensures that its potential client base is virtually infinite. This allows the complex to grow even when actual physical danger in society might be decreasing.
The transition from “nerves” or “character” to “disordered” represents a massive shift in social logic. In the era of Summer of ’42, a young man might feel “shaken” or “changed,” but he was not “ill.” Horwitz and Wakefield show that by medicalizing these states, the industry replaces an individual’s internal “buffer” with a pharmaceutical or therapeutic dependency. This maximizes income for drug companies and prestige for clinicians who are now seen as essential for managing even the most mundane anxieties of daily life.
The mental health industrial complex acts as a chronicler of a “culture of fear.” By constantly identifying new “threats” to mental well-being, they justify their own necessity. This reflects your point that the expansion of trauma definitions often comes at the expense of the general public. Instead of fostering a society that understands anxiety as a natural, if uncomfortable, part of life, the industry fosters a society of “patients” who view their own survival instincts as evidence of a broken mind.
In All We Have to Fear, Horwitz and Wakefield introduce the concept of “harmful dysfunction” as a way to distinguish between true mental disorders and natural, though painful, human responses. Applying this logic to the end of Summer of ’42 fundamentally changes how we view Hermie’s transition into adulthood.
Under the current psychiatric framework, a modern practitioner might diagnose the young Hermie with an adjustment disorder or even early-onset PTSD. The “symptom-based logic” described in Creating Mental Illness would focus on his shell-shocked state, his withdrawal from his friends, and the “inappropriate” nature of the sexual encounter. By stripping away the context of the 1940s and the specific tragedy of Dorothy’s loss, the mental health industrial complex would pathologize Hermie’s sadness. This categorization serves the institution by turning a universal experience of “growing up too fast” into a clinical case requiring intervention.
However, the “harmful dysfunction” model suggests that for a disorder to exist, there must be a failure of an internal mechanism to perform its evolutionary function. Hermie’s reaction at the end of the film is not a dysfunction; it is a highly functional response to a profound life event. His melancholy and his sudden distance from the “Terrible Trio” are natural adaptations to the realization that life contains death, sex, and irreversible change. His internal mechanisms are working exactly as they should—they are signaling the gravity of his experience.
The narrator’s adult voice confirms this lack of dysfunction. He has not spent his life in a state of clinical impairment. Instead, he has used that summer as a “found” part of his identity. The symmetry of his adult life is built on the integration of that memory, not the “cure” of it. If Hermie had been “treated” by the modern mental health complex, the “porous” beauty of that summer might have been scrubbed away and replaced by a narrative of victimhood. The industry would have gained a patient, but Hermie would have lost the very experience that made him a reflective and soulful man.
The mental health industrial complex prefers to see Hermie as a victim because a victim needs a chronicler and a savior. By maintaining the “harmful dysfunction” distinction, we can see that Hermie’s “trauma” is actually a form of deep learning. His sadness is a sign of a healthy, functioning human spirit grappling with the interplay of love and loss.
The work of Allan Horwitz provides a rigorous sociological foundation for the idea that our modern “trauma” landscape is a product of institutional shift rather than biological discovery. By moving the focus from the internal mind to the external social structure, Horwitz reveals how the mental health industrial complex functions as a self-perpetuating system.
Horwitz argues that the move to the DSM-III in 1980 was a “logic” of professional survival. Before this, psychiatry used a “porous” model where life context mattered. If you were sad because your husband died, you weren’t “depressed”—you were grieving. By switching to a symptom-based logic, the industry could ignore the why and focus only on the what. This allowed them to claim a medical symmetry with doctors who treat strep throat or broken bones. It turned “problems in living” into “brain diseases,” which is much more profitable and prestigious for a profession seeking to justify its existence to insurance companies and the state.
This ties directly back to the social construction of the teenager/older woman encounter. In a Horwitzian analysis, the reason we now see such an event as “trauma” is that the mental health industry has successfully expanded the definition of “disorder” to capture as much human experience as possible. As he and Wakefield argue in All We Have to Fear, the industry “captures” natural anxieties. A teenager’s natural confusion or intensity after a sexual encounter is a survival mechanism, not a pathology. When the industry labels it “trauma,” they aren’t discovering a truth; they are claiming a territory.
Horwitz’s perspective suggests that the “buffered” individual of the past—who could experience a difficult summer and remain “whole”—is being replaced by a “diagnostic” individual. This new person is taught to monitor their own internal states for symptoms. This shift doesn’t happen because people are getting sicker; it happens because the “chroniclers” of our mental life have a vested interest in a high “illness” count. High rates of disorder justify more research grants, more pharmaceutical sales, and more institutional power.
Horwitz strips away the “is” constructions of psychiatry—”he is depressed,” “he is traumatized”—and looks at the active verbs of institutional behavior. He shows that the “interplay” between a doctor and a patient is often less about healing and more about the “logic” of classification.
The use of mental health discourse by Human Resources (HR) departments provides a prime example of how the “symptom-based logic” Allan Horwitz describes serves institutional power. In this context, the mental health industrial complex and corporate bureaucracy form a symmetry that replaces traditional labor relations with clinical management.
Instead of addressing workplace conflict through the lens of interests or power—which might involve unions or legal disputes—HR often shifts the problem to the employee’s internal state. If an employee reacts with natural anxiety to a high-pressure environment, the “harmful dysfunction” model would see this as a functional response. However, HR prefers to pathologize this reaction. By framing burnout or dissent as a personal mental health issue, the company achieves several strategic goals:
First, it shifts the responsibility from the organization to the individual. If the problem is a “disorder” within the employee, the company doesn’t need to change its management style or workload; the employee simply needs “support” or “treatment.” This is a purification ritual that preserves the company’s image while marking the employee as “polluted” by illness.
Second, it provides a “neutral” logic for social control. It is difficult for an employee to argue against a clinical diagnosis. When HR suggests that an employee’s “dynamics” are a sign of underlying trauma, they are using what Stephen Turner calls “tacit knowledge.” The HR professional and the therapist they refer you to claim a specialized understanding of your mind that you are not allowed to challenge. This effectively silences the employee’s grievances by rebranding them as symptoms.
The “industrial” part of the complex benefits here as well. Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs) and corporate wellness initiatives create a steady stream of “subthreshold” patients. By expanding the definition of trauma to include workplace stress, these providers ensure a permanent role within the corporate structure. They act as the chroniclers of employee “wellness,” providing data and metrics that justify their own contracts.
In the world of Summer of ’42, Hermie faced his transition to adulthood without an HR department to “manage” his sadness. He was allowed to be melancholy because it was a natural response to his life. In the modern corporate world, his silence and withdrawal would likely trigger a “wellness check” or a referral to a counselor. The interplay of modern management and diagnostic psychiatry ensures that no one is allowed to be “buffered” from the system. Everyone must be “porous” and available for clinical intervention.
The expansion of these definitions maximizes the prestige of the experts. The “mental health industrial complex” gains more territory every time a human emotion is successfully rebranded as a corporate liability.
Allan Horwitz has maintained a remarkably consistent and high-level output over the past four years, continuing his systematic deconstruction of the history and social logic of psychiatric classification. His recent work focuses on the specific historical trajectories of individual diagnostic categories, showing how they shifted from “problems in living” to medicalized “disorders.”
In 2021, he published DSM: A History of Psychiatry’s Bible, which serves as a comprehensive biography of the manual. He argues that the DSM is a social document rather than a purely scientific one. The book details how the manual persists not because of its scientific accuracy, but because it is intertwined with the interests of insurers, pharmaceutical companies, and researchers who benefit from its categorical definitions. This work underscores the “symmetry” between institutional needs and the creation of “mental illness.”
His production continued in 2022 with Personality Disorders: A Short History of Narcissistic, Borderline, Antisocial, and Other Types. In this volume, he traces how traits once viewed as character flaws or moral failings became medicalized into “disordered” personalities. He shows how the shift to the diagnostic psychiatry of the 1980s forced these complex human behaviors into rigid, symptom-based boxes. This aligns with his broader argument that the “mental health industrial complex” expands its reach by claiming jurisdiction over personality and character.
Looking ahead, his next major work, Darwin’s Descendants: Evolutionary Theories of Human Behavior and Their Critics, is slated for release in late 2026. This project appears to deepen the “interplay” between biology and sociology that he explored in All We Have to Fear. He likely uses an evolutionary lens to further distinguish between “natural” human responses and the “dysfunctions” claimed by modern psychiatry.
Throughout this period, he has also been active in the academic community, contributing to volumes like Diagnosis, Therapy, and Evidence and appearing on various platforms to discuss the “logic” of social control. His work remains the primary chronicle of how our society has traded a “buffered” understanding of human nature for a “porous” one that is increasingly managed by experts.
