In a sense, the authors of Reaching Across Boundaries of Culture and Class put psychoanalysis itself on the couch. In the first section of the book, the authors diagnose psychoanalysis, the patient, as suffering from various forms of pathology, such as ethnocentrism, elitism, and classism. Péez Foster argues that analysis has made itself irrelevant to the poor and to people from other cultures because of the tendency of many analysts to idealize their own values and the patients who share them and to reject the values of poor non-Westerners.