Khameer Kidia is a writer, physician, and anthropologist at Harvard Medical School and University of Zimbabwe. A Rhodes Scholar and 2023 New America Fellow, Kidia has worked on global mental health research, practice, and advocacy for the last decade. His writing has been published in New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet Psychiatry, The New York Times, Slate, Yale Review, and Los Angeles Review of Books. Born in Zimbabwe, Kidia lives between Harare and Washington, D.C.
“Empire of Madness argues that the solution to our mental health crisis is not more psychiatry, but more justice. Khameer Kidia makes the powerful case that what we diagnose as individual illness is often a rational response to structural violence. This is an essential, paradigm-shifting book.”—Anne Boyer, Pulitzer Prize winning author of The Undying “Deftly moving between incisive social and geopolitical analysis of what Western medicine calls ‘mental illness’ and personal experience as a child of empire turned Western-educated physician, Kidia unfolds one brilliant revelation after another. Empire of Madness is required reading for anyone who seeks to improve health care—it offers solutions as much as it does critique—as well as anyone who wishes to better understand their own mental distress. If you read only one book on decolonizing mental health care, this should be it.”—Grace Cho, author of National Book Award finalist Tastes Like War “Deeply researched . . . An ambitious take on the diagnosis and treatment of mental health issues viewed through a cross-cultural lens.”—Kirkus Reviews “Moving nimbly between the Global North and Global South, Kidia unpacks why we are faced with a global mental health crisis and what we can do to fix it. Meticulously researched and compassionately written, Empire of Madness is an urgently needed update to the Western mental health canon.”—Dixon Chibanda, professor of psychiatry and global mental health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and author of The Friendship Bench “In Empire of Madness, Khameer Kidia does something rare and necessary: traces the roots of Western psychiatry back through colonial violence and family memory. This book challenges readers to see how deeply empire shapes not just who receives care, but how we understand mental suffering itself. A vital intervention that asks whether the tools we’ve inherited can ever truly heal us.”—Esmé Weijun Wang, author of The Collected Schizophrenias “Boldly interrogating his own complicity in the system he critiques, Kidia brings a fresh, radical, and essential voice that reimagines the possibilities for global health care—and for a more compassionate world.”—Albert Samaha, author of Concepcion: An Immigrant Family’s Fate “Blending vivid personal storytelling with history, anthropology, and medicine, Empire of Madness provocatively exposes the quicksand of a biomedical approach to mental health problems. Kidia highlights the importance of culture and context and prescribes the powerful antidotes of community action and social reform. A must-read for everyone interested in a refreshing, even radical, perspective on mental health.”—Vikram Patel, Paul Farmer Professor and Chair of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School