Hubbry Logo
Dorothy RoweDorothy RoweMain
Open search
Dorothy Rowe
Community hub
Dorothy Rowe
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Dorothy Rowe
Dorothy Rowe
from Wikipedia

Dorothy Rowe at Humber Mouth 2009

Dorothy Rowe (née Conn; 17 December 1930 – 25 March 2019) was an Australian-British psychologist and author, whose area of interest was depression.

Biography

[edit]

Dorothy Conn was born on 17 December 1930 in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.[citation needed]

Rowe came to England in her forties, working at Sheffield University and was the head of Lincolnshire Department of Clinical Psychology.[1] In addition to her published works on depression, she was a regular columnist in the UK.[2][3]

She spent her time working with depressed patients and, through listening to their stories, came to reject the medical model of mental illness, instead working within personal construct theory.[4] She believed that depression is a result of beliefs which do not enable a person to live comfortably with themselves or the world. Most notably it is the belief in a "Just World" (that the bad are punished and the good rewarded) that exacerbates feelings of fear and anxiety if disaster strikes. Part of recovering is accepting that the external world is unpredictable and that we control relatively little of it.[citation needed]

In July 1989, Rowe made an extended appearance on the British television discussion programme After Dark alongside, among others, Steven Rose, Frank Cioffi, The Bishop of Durham and Michael Bentine.[citation needed]

The BBC were required to apologise to Dorothy Rowe in 2009 after the production editing of her radio interview misrepresented her views on the impact of religion in providing structure to people's lives.[5]

She died on March 25, 2019, in Sydney.[citation needed]

Works

[edit]
  • What Should I Believe?, 2008, ISBN 978-0415-46679-0
  • Depression: The Way Out of Your Prison 3rd edition 2003 ISBN 1-58391-286-X
  • Friends & Enemies: Our Need to Love and Hate ISBN 0-00-255939-0
  • Dorothy Rowe's Guide to Life ISBN 0-00-255562-X
  • Wanting Everything: The Art of Happiness ISBN 0-00-637430-1
  • Beyond Fear ISBN 0-00-711924-0
  • Time on our side: Growing in Wisdom, Not Growing Old ISBN 0-00-215970-8
  • Choosing Not Losing: The Experience of Depression ISBN 0-00-637202-3
  • Living with the Bomb ISBN 0-7102-0477-9
  • The Courage to Live ISBN 0-00-637384-4
  • The Successful Self ISBN 0-00-637342-9
  • Breaking the Bonds: Understanding Depression, Finding Freedom ISBN 0-00-637565-0
  • The Real Meaning of Money ISBN 0-00-255329-5
  • My Dearest Enemy, My Dangerous Friend, making and breaking sibling bonds ISBN 978-0-415-39048-4
  • Why We Lie ISBN 978-0-00-735-797-0

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Dorothy Rowe was an Australian clinical psychologist and author known for her influential work on depression and mental distress, emphasizing that these conditions arise from crises in personal meaning and self-constructed belief systems rather than primarily biological causes. Drawing on George Kelly's personal construct theory, she argued that individuals create their own worlds of meaning from past experiences, and that understanding and revising these meanings can offer a path out of psychological suffering. Her approach challenged the dominant medical model of mental illness, including routine use of antidepressants and ECT, and highlighted the importance of listening to individuals' unique interpretations of their lives. Through her clear and accessible writing, she reached a wide audience, helping many reframe their experiences and empowering them to take responsibility for their emotional well-being. Born in 1930 in Newcastle, New South Wales, as Dorothy Conn, she earned a psychology degree and diploma of education from the University of Sydney before working as a teacher and training as an educational psychologist specializing in emotionally disturbed children. After moving to England in 1968 with her son, she held clinical roles in the National Health Service, including research at Whiteley Wood Clinic and establishing the Lincolnshire Department of Clinical Psychology in 1972. She left the NHS in 1986 to work independently, later serving as an Emeritus Associate of the Royal College of Psychiatrists and holding visiting professorships at several universities. Rowe authored sixteen books, including Depression: The Way Out of Your Prison (which won the Mind Book of the Year Award in 1984), The Experience of Depression, and The Construction of Life and Death, many of which were translated into multiple languages and drew praise for their clarity and life-changing insights. She was a frequent contributor to newspapers and magazines, appeared regularly on radio and television, and built a large public following through lectures and media engagements. Recognized in lists such as the Daily Telegraph’s 100 most powerful women in Britain and honored by tributes from prominent figures, Rowe remained a vocal critic of psychiatric orthodoxy, organized religion, and cultural pressures that foster guilt and unattainable standards. She returned to Sydney in semi-retirement in 2015 and died there on 25 March 2019 at the age of 88.

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Childhood

Dorothy Rowe was born Dorothy Conn on 17 December 1930 in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, the daughter of Jack Conn, a travelling salesman, and Ella Conn (née Snedden). Her mother suffered from depression, exposing Dorothy to the condition from an early age. Dorothy grew up in a difficult family environment where her mother described her as "fat, ugly and lazy" and ignored her childhood pleas for treatment of bronchiectasis, a lung condition that caused ongoing discomfort and which Dorothy later held responsible for contributing to her lifelong health struggles. Her elder sister regarded her with "fascinated disgust." Despite these early challenges and the presence of depression within her family, Dorothy never experienced depression herself and developed considerable resilience in response to her upbringing.

Education and Early Career in Australia

Dorothy Rowe attended Newcastle Girls' High School before pursuing higher education at the University of Sydney, where she obtained a degree in psychology and a Diploma of Education. Following her university studies, she taught for three years. In 1956 she married Edward Rowe, and their son Edward was born the following year. She returned to teaching when her son was two years old but was soon offered the opportunity to train as a school counsellor, also referred to as an educational psychologist. During this period she completed her Diploma in Clinical Psychology. Her early professional experience as an educational psychologist, working with children, foreshadowed her subsequent focus on clinical psychology.

Move to the United Kingdom and Clinical Career

Relocation and Initial NHS Positions

Following the end of her marriage in 1965, Dorothy Rowe relocated to Britain in 1968 with her young son. She accepted a National Health Service post at the Whiteley Wood Clinic in Sheffield, an institution affiliated with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Sheffield. At Whiteley Wood Clinic, Rowe began researching the biological bases of mood disorders while working clinically with patients. She grew increasingly doubtful about the prevailing medical model of mental illness, questioning its emphasis on biological explanations and treatments. During this period, Rowe turned toward George Kelly's personal construct theory as an alternative framework for understanding psychological distress. The work of Don Bannister, who was actively introducing British psychologists to Kelly's ideas and personal construct theory, influenced her adoption of repertory grid techniques in her clinical and research efforts.

Leadership in Clinical Psychology and PhD

Dorothy Rowe was awarded her PhD in 1971 from the University of Sheffield for her thesis on the psychological aspects of regular mood change. Her doctoral research, conducted while holding an NHS post at Whiteley Wood Clinic in Sheffield, drew on personal construct theory and employed repertory grid techniques with assistance from experts such as Patrick Slater. In 1972, Rowe established and headed the Lincolnshire Health Authority Department of Clinical Psychology at St John's Psychiatric Hospital in Lincoln. This role marked her first major leadership position in clinical psychology in the United Kingdom, where she built the department from its inception. During her tenure, Rowe frequently clashed with psychiatrists, particularly over her rejection of the dominant medical model of mental illness in favor of psychological explanations. These conflicts arose soon after her arrival and stemmed from her emphasis on personal meaning and construct systems rather than pharmacological or somatic interventions. She continued to apply personal construct theory in her clinical practice throughout this period.

Independent Career and Academic Roles

Departure from NHS and Freelance Work

In 1986 Dorothy Rowe left the National Health Service to become self-employed and relocated to Sheffield, where she lived for nine years while continuing her professional activities. In 1995 she moved to London, settling in a basement flat in Islington, where she continued to write and inspire others through her psychological insights. She maintained an active independent career that included clinical work as a psychologist, writing, and lecturing.

Visiting Professorships and Later Positions

In the new century, Dorothy Rowe held visiting professorships at Middlesex University, London Metropolitan University, and the University of Sunderland. She was an Emeritus Associate of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. In 2015, she returned to Sydney, Australia, where she lived in semi-retirement.

Key Contributions to Psychology

Theories on Depression and Meaning

Dorothy Rowe conceptualized depression not as a biological illness but as a crisis of meaning arising when an individual's subjective interpretation of the world is profoundly threatened or invalidated. She drew on personal construct theory to explain that people develop unique mental models or constructs to make sense of their experiences and predict future events, but when these constructs fail to accommodate major life changes or losses, the person may experience depression as the collapse of meaning. Rowe argued that depressed individuals often treat their personal constructs as absolute truths rather than provisional interpretations, leading to a sense of hopelessness and entrapment when reality contradicts those constructs. Rowe stressed the necessity of listening attentively to the depressed person's own account of their life and meanings rather than imposing diagnostic labels or resorting to pharmacological interventions and electroconvulsive therapy. She viewed such treatments as bypassing the core issue of disrupted meaning, whereas empathetic exploration of the person's subjective world could facilitate understanding and change. She identified the "just world" hypothesis—the belief that the world is fundamentally fair and that people get what they deserve—as a particularly damaging construct that exacerbates depression. When unavoidable suffering or injustice occurs, adherence to this belief can intensify fear, self-blame, and anxiety, as the person struggles to reconcile the event with their expectation of cosmic justice. Rowe proposed that recovery from depression requires acknowledging the inherent unpredictability of life and the limits of personal control, thereby freeing the individual to revise their constructs and create new meanings. This shift away from rigid certainty toward greater flexibility enables the person to envision a viable future. Rowe was highly sceptical of antidepressants such as Prozac, considering them little better than placebos.

Adoption of Personal Construct Theory

Dorothy Rowe adopted George Kelly's personal construct theory (PCT) during her time working in Sheffield, where she became exposed to it as a more authentic approach to understanding human experience compared to the dominant medical and psychiatric models. She described discovering PCT as encountering the first and only psychological theory that actually related to real human beings, prompting her to shift away from traditional diagnostic frameworks. This transition occurred amid her clinical roles in the NHS, particularly as she sought tools to better explore individual perceptions of reality. A key element of her adoption was the repertory grid technique, which Kelly developed to elicit and map personal constructs. Rowe was introduced to repertory grids through discussions in the Psychology Department at Sheffield University, where someone mentioned the method as a way to investigate how people construe their worlds. She integrated this technique into her practice to help patients articulate their unique ways of making sense of experiences, especially in the context of mood disorders. Rowe further advanced her use of PCT through collaboration with Patrick Slater at the Institute of Psychiatry in London, where Slater developed computer software to analyze repertory grid data, making the method more systematic and applicable in clinical and research settings. This partnership enhanced her ability to apply PCT to patient meaning-making, allowing for detailed exploration of individual construct systems in mood disorders without relying on predefined categories. Her embrace of PCT, solidified in the early 1970s around the time she completed her PhD in 1971 and began using repertory grids more extensively in 1972, fundamentally shaped her clinical approach. This adoption contributed to her rejection of biological determinism, emphasizing instead the personal construction of psychological distress.

Criticisms of Psychiatric Orthodoxy and Religion

Dorothy Rowe was a sharp critic of mainstream psychiatric practices, rejecting the prevailing view that depression and other mental disorders are primarily biological illnesses requiring medical treatment. She argued that depression is not a disease but a meaningful way individuals make sense of their experiences, and she opposed the medical model's emphasis on chemical imbalances as the root cause. Rowe expressed strong scepticism toward antidepressants such as Prozac, considering them little better than placebos and questioning their widespread use. She likened the administration of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) to the outdated and discredited medical practice of blood-letting, viewing it as an invasive procedure with questionable efficacy and significant risks. Rowe extended her critique to organized religion, particularly Christianity, which she believed contributed to depression by instilling pervasive guilt, insisting on absolute certainty, and promoting a "just world" belief that suffering results from moral failings. She famously remarked, “The church keeps me in business,” underscoring her view that religious teachings often generate the emotional distress and self-blame that sustain demand for psychological help. She consistently advocated for individualized approaches that prioritize understanding personal meanings over reliance on medication or standardized psychiatric interventions.

Literary Career

Major Books on Depression and Mental Health

Dorothy Rowe authored several influential books on depression and mental health, emphasizing the personal meanings and constructs individuals create to interpret their experiences. Her work challenged conventional psychiatric approaches by focusing on subjective understanding rather than biological models. Her first major book in this area, The Experience of Depression, appeared in 1978 and was later reissued under the title Choosing Not Losing. In 1982, she published The Construction of Life and Death, which was subsequently retitled The Courage to Live. Rowe's most prominent work, Depression: The Way Out of Your Prison, was published in 1983 and won the Mind Book of the Year award in 1984; it reached a third edition in 2003. The book presented depression as a prison built from personal meanings and offered ways to escape it through rethinking those constructs. In 1991, she released Wanting Everything: The Art of Happiness, exploring the pursuit of happiness through self-understanding. Other notable titles on related themes include Beyond Fear (1987), The Successful Self (1988), Friends & Enemies (1996), and Why We Lie (2002). Rowe wrote a total of 16 books during her career, many of which were translated into multiple languages.

Other Publications and Journalism

Dorothy Rowe engaged in extensive journalism throughout her career, contributing to a range of magazines and newspapers where she shared her insights on mental health and personal development. She served as a regular columnist for the magazine Openmind, which focused on mental health issues, and for the parenting magazine Chat, where she acted as an agony aunt providing advice on family and personal matters. She was a frequent contributor to several major British newspapers, including The Guardian, The Daily Mail, The Daily Express, The Telegraph, and The Observer, in which she published articles on psychological topics, depression, and critiques of conventional psychiatric approaches. In addition to popular media, Rowe published scholarly articles in journals related to psychology, psychiatry, and philosophy, extending her theoretical contributions to academic audiences. Her journalism work helped to popularize her distinctive views on mental health and meaning, reaching broad audiences beyond her book publications.

Media and Public Engagement

Television Appearances

Dorothy Rowe appeared on British television programs as a clinical psychologist and author, contributing to discussions on psychological and related topics. She featured as Dr. Dorothy Rowe in the BBC documentary series Everyman, appearing in the episode "The Mind Box" that aired on February 3, 1985. In 1989, she made an extended appearance on the late-night open discussion programme After Dark in the episode "What Is There to Believe In?", broadcast on July 29, 1989, alongside Steven Rose, Frank Cioffi, the Bishop of Durham, and Michael Bentine. Rowe also appeared as a clinical psychologist on James Randi: Psychic Investigator in 1991. In 1994, she featured as herself on the regional television series Close Up North in an episode dated January 1, 1994. These appearances reflected her public engagement as an expert in mental health and psychology.

Radio, Columns, and Public Speaking

Dorothy Rowe frequently appeared on radio programmes, sharing her insights on mental health, depression, and personal construct psychology. She was particularly noted for her appearance as the castaway on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, broadcast on 24 March 2002, where she discussed her life, influences, and professional work while selecting eight pieces of music. Rowe also engaged extensively in public speaking, drawing significant crowds at lectures and conferences in both the UK and Australia. Examples include an event at Westminster Central Hall that attracted over 1,000 attendees and a conference appearance in Perth in 2006. Her reputation for addressing large audiences reflected her commitment to communicating psychological ideas directly to the public. In 2009, BBC Radio 4 issued an on-air apology after a programme misrepresented Rowe's views on religion during an interview. She additionally contributed columns to newspapers and other publications, using these platforms to reach broader audiences with her perspectives on psychological well-being.

Personal Life and Death

Marriage, Family, and Personal Challenges

Dorothy Rowe married Edward Rowe in 1956. Their son, Edward, was born the following year in 1957. The marriage ended in divorce in 1964, after which Rowe raised her son as a single parent. She moved to Britain with her son in 1968. Rowe lived with bronchiectasis, a chronic lung condition that developed in her childhood and caused ongoing discomfort throughout her life. The illness required daily management and contributed to significant personal challenges, yet she maintained her professional and parental responsibilities. Despite a difficult family background, Rowe cultivated notable resilience and never experienced clinical depression herself. She was survived by her son Edward.

Return to Australia and Legacy

In 2015, Dorothy Rowe returned to Sydney, Australia, after decades living and working in the United Kingdom, where she entered semi-retirement while continuing to reflect on her ideas through occasional writings and correspondence. She spent her final years in her native country, maintaining a quiet life focused on personal contemplation. Dorothy Rowe died on 25 March 2019 in Sydney, at the age of 88, from bronchiectasis. Rowe's legacy endures as an influential critic of psychiatric orthodoxy, particularly for her rejection of diagnostic labels and the biomedical model of mental illness in favor of understanding personal meaning-making through personal construct theory. She authored 16 books that offered accessible, compassionate perspectives on depression, fear, anxiety, and the human condition, reaching wide audiences beyond academic circles. Her contributions were recognized with the Mind Book of the Year award, and she appeared in Saga magazine's list of the wisest people in Britain as well as a 1997 public poll ranking the World's Top 100 Geniuses. The novelist Fay Weldon described Rowe as "the closest thing we have to a saint" for her empathetic approach to suffering. Rowe's work also reflected a feminist sensibility, advocating for women's autonomy and challenging patriarchal structures in mental health discourse and society. Her ideas continue to inform discussions on mental health, emphasizing individual experience over standardized treatment.
Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.