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Bynum / Porter / Shepherd

The Anatomy of Madness

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-0-415-32382-6
Verlag: CRC Press
Erscheinungstermin: 25.09.2003
Lieferfrist: bis zu 10 Tage
Originally published in 1985 by The Tavistock Press, this three-volume set covers the history of British and continental European madness and psychiatry from the Renaissance through to Freud. The long time-span covered affords the reader views of the changing understanding of madness and the resultant policies towards it in the light of long-term developments such as secularization and industrialization.

Volume 1 examines theories of madness and its treatment, both those of laymen and those of the emergent psychiatric profession, as well as looking at the experiences of mad people themselves.
Volume 2 examines the emergence of the modern lunatic asylum and judges how far it lived up to the hopes of the nineteenth century reformers. Essays on such subjects as psychiatry in the courtroom and the treatment of First World War shellshock victims dissect the historical dimensions of current notions of psychiatry as a means of social control.
Volume 3 brings together essays on nineteenth century psychiatry on various themes ranging from the architecture of asylums to social policy, from therapeutics to professionalization. As well as British, aspects of French, Italian, American and Danish psychiatry are also analysed.

Produkteigenschaften


  • Artikelnummer: 9780415323826
  • Medium: Buch
  • ISBN: 978-0-415-32382-6
  • Verlag: CRC Press
  • Erscheinungstermin: 25.09.2003
  • Sprache(n): Englisch
  • Auflage: 1. Auflage 2003
  • Serie: Routledge Library Editions
  • Produktform: Gebunden
  • Gewicht: 1587 g
  • Seiten: 1008
  • Format (B x H): 138 x 216 mm
  • Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt

Autoren/Hrsg.

Autoren

Bynum, W.F.

Porter, Roy

Shepherd, Michael

Volume 1: People and Ideas

1. M. A. Screech. Good Madness in Christendom

2. Theodore M. Brown. Descartes, dualism, and psychosomatic medicine

3. Roy Porter. 'The Hunger of Imagination': approaching Samuel Johnson's melancholy

4. W. F. Bynum. The nervous patient in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain: the psychiatric origins of British neurology

5. Andrew Scull. A Victorian alienist: John Conolly

6. Janet Browne. Darwin and the face of madness

7. G. E. Berrios. Obsessional disorders during the nineteenth century: terminological and classificatory issues

8. Ian Dowbiggin. Degeneration and hereditarianism in French mental medicine

9. J. P. Williams. Psychical research and psychiatry in late Victorian Britain: trance as esctasy or trance as insanity

10. John Forrester. Contracting the disease of love: authority and freeedom in the origins of psychoanalysis

11. Anthony Clare. Freud's cases: the clinical basis of psychoanalysis

12. W. F. Bynum and Michael Neve. Hamlet on the couch

Volume 2: Institutions and Society

1. Patricia Allderidge. Bedlam: fact or fantasy?

2. Joel Peter Eigen. Intentionality and insanity: what the eighteenth-century juror heard

3. Anne Digby. Moral treatment at the Retreat, 1796-1846

4. Fiona Godlee. Aspects of non-conformity: Quakers and the lunatic fringe

5. Roger Qvarsell. Locked up or put to bed: psychiatry and the treatment of the mentally ill in Sweden, 1800-1920

6. N. Hervey. A slavish bowing down: the Lunacy Commission and the psychiatric profession 1845-60

7. J. K. Walton. Casting out and bringing back in Victorian England; pauper lunatics, 1840-70

8. Charlotte Mackenzie. Social factors in the admission, discharge, and continuing stay of patients at Ticehurst Asylum, 1845-1917

9. Annamaria Tagliavini. Aspects of the history of psychiatry in Italy in the second half of the nineteenth century

10. Ruth Harris. Murder under hypnosis in the case of Gabrielle Bompard: psychiatry in the courtroom in Belle Époque Paris

11. Martin Stone. Shellshock and the psychologists

Volume III: The Asylum and its Psychiatry

1. Christine Stevenson. Madness and the picturesque in the Kingdom of Denmark

2. Waltraud Ernst. Asylums in alien places: the treatment of the European insane in British India

3. Michael J. Clark. 'Morbid introspection', unsoundness of mind, and British psychological medicine

4. Patricia Guarnieri. Between soma and psyche: Morselli and psychiatry in late-nineteenth-century Italy

5. Jamed G. Donat. Medicine and religion: on the physical and mental disorders that accompanied the Ulster Revival of 1859

6. Trevor Turner. Henry Maudsley: psychiatrist, philosopher, and entrepreneur

7. Nancy Tomes. The great restraint controversy: a comparative perspective on Anglo-American psychiatry in the nineteenth century

8. Anne Harrington. Hysteria, hypnosis, and the lure of the invisible: the rise of neo-mesmerism in fin-de-siècle French

9. David Cochrane. 'Humane, economical, and medically wise': the LCC as administrators of Victorian lunacy policy

10. Janet Saunders. Quarantining the weak-minded: psychiatric definitions of degeneracy and the late-Victorian asylum

11. Richard Russell. The lunacy profession and its staff in the second half of the nineteenth century, with special reference to the West Riding Lunatic Asylum

12. Margaret S. Thompson. The wages of sin: the problem of alcoholism and general paralysis in nineteenth-century