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Under certain kinds of stress or duress, individuals can be made to comply with the demands of those in power. They can also be induced to adopt beliefs and behaviors far different from those that were characteristic of them before the stress was applied. Terms like brainwashing, thought reform, coercive persuasion, and mind control have been employed to describe these processes and to account for consequential changes in personality and behavior. In the past such terms-and the processes they defined- referred mainly to techniques for influencing prisoners of war, political detainees, hostages held by terrorists, and the like. Recently, scrutiny has turned to similar methods used by leaders of cults· to recruit, retain, and exploit members. (Throughout this article the term cult is used to mean totalist cult, as defined below under "Cult Indoctrination.")
Persons who have been exposed to such conditions in cults may suffer considerable harm. Their families, friends, and communities are also likely to suffer. This article inquires primarily into the techniques that cults employ to bind and exploit their members, and certain psychiatric consequences that result. The scope of the cult problem, types of psychopathology exhibited by cult victims, and approaches to their treatment and rehabilitation, are discussed extensively elsewhere.
Brainwashing has come to mean "intensive indoctrination . . . in an attempt to induce someone to give up basic political, social or religious beliefs and attitudes and accept contrasting regimented ideas." The term is sometimes employed in a narrower sense, connoting forcible and prolonged procedures, including mental torture, and sometimes in a broader sense, as "to persuade by propaganda" (Webster's, 1966).
The English word brainwashing was coined by an American journalist (Hunter, 1951), from Chinese ideographs that are perhaps more usefully and less pejoratively translated as "thought reform." Originally brainwashing had to do with a technique for political indoctrination of small groups of people (not necessarily prisoners) in order to rid them of previously practiced "wrong thinking" and convert them to Communism or at least make them sympathetic to Marxist beliefs. This method helped Mao Tse-tung and his followers to win over the Chinese people to the revolutionary cause. Torture and deliberate mistreatment were not necessarily part of this procedure (West, 1963).
During and after the Korean War, however, the...