History of Psychiatry and Medical Psychology With an Epilogue on Psychiatry and the Mind-Body Relation /

The first English-language comprehensive reference on the history of psychiatry since 1966. The Romans knew that Nero was insane. Shakespeare’s Macbeth asked his doctor to treat "a mind diseased." The people of the European Enlightenment era pondered whether the asylum inmates were mad or...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Συγγραφή απο Οργανισμό/Αρχή: SpringerLink (Online service)
Άλλοι συγγραφείς: Wallace, Edwin R. (Επιμελητής έκδοσης), Gach, John (Επιμελητής έκδοσης)
Μορφή: Ηλεκτρονική πηγή Ηλ. βιβλίο
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2008.
Θέματα:
Διαθέσιμο Online:Full Text via HEAL-Link
Πίνακας περιεχομένων:
  • Prolegomenon
  • Historiography
  • Contextualizing the History of Psychiatry/Psychology and Psychoanalysis
  • Periods
  • Mind and Madness in Classical Antiquity
  • Mental Disturbances, Unusual Mental States, and Their Interpretation during the Middle Ages
  • Renaissance Conceptions and Treatments of Madness
  • The Madman in the Light of Reason Enlightenment Psychiatry
  • The Madman in the Light of Reason. Enlightenment Psychiatry
  • Philippe Pinel in the Twenty-First Century
  • German Romantic Psychiatry
  • German Romantic Psychiatry
  • Descriptive Psychiatry and Psychiatric Nosology during the Nineteenth Century
  • Biological Psychiatry in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
  • The Intersection of Psychopharmacology and Psychiatry in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century
  • Concepts and Topics
  • A History of Melancholia and Depression
  • Constructing Schizophrenia as a Category of Mental Illness
  • The Concept of Psychosomatic Medicine
  • Neurology’s Influence on American Psychiatry: 1865–1915
  • The Transformation of American Psychiatry
  • The Transition to Secular Psychotherapy
  • Psychoanalysis in Central Europe
  • The Psychoanalytic Movement in the United States, 1906–1991
  • The Development of Clinical Psychology, Social Work, and Psychiatric Nursing: 1900–1980s
  • Epilogue Psychiatry and the Mind-Body Relation
  • Thoughts Toward a Critique of Biological Psychiatry
  • Two “Mind”-“Body” Models for a Holistic Psychiatry
  • Freud on “Mind-Body” I: The Psychoneurobiological and “Instinctualist” Stance; with Implications for Chapter 24, and Two Postscripts
  • Freud on “Mind”-“Body” II: Drive, Motivation, Meaning, History, and Freud’s Psychological Heuristic; with Clinical and Everyday Examples
  • Psychosomatic Medicine and the Mind-Body Relation.