Mind-forg'd Manacles: A History of Madness in England from the Restoration to the RegencyAthlone Press, 1987 - 412 страници This book is an exploration of the attitudes towards, and treatments for, madness in the age before the mass asylum and the emergence of the psychiatric profession. |
Между кориците на книгата
Резултати 1 - 3 от 13.
Страница 5
... evil of bad treatment , every fault of commission and omission ' , unlike the progressive non- restraint methods he had pioneered . And fellow non - restrainer Gardiner Hill decried the ' old era in psychiatry in which there was no ...
... evil of bad treatment , every fault of commission and omission ' , unlike the progressive non- restraint methods he had pioneered . And fellow non - restrainer Gardiner Hill decried the ' old era in psychiatry in which there was no ...
Страница 148
... evil had got to such a pitch , Defoe claimed in The True Born Englishman , that private madhouses , mushrooming around London , had become far worse than ' a clandestine inquisition'.179 ' Is it not enough , ' he demanded , ' to make ...
... evil had got to such a pitch , Defoe claimed in The True Born Englishman , that private madhouses , mushrooming around London , had become far worse than ' a clandestine inquisition'.179 ' Is it not enough , ' he demanded , ' to make ...
Страница 154
... evil . This source of outrage still , of course , continued into the Victorian age , as campaigners such as Louisa Lowe revealed.198 Indeed , once certification by a physician was mandatory , professional authority grew and release ...
... evil . This source of outrage still , of course , continued into the Victorian age , as campaigners such as Louisa Lowe revealed.198 Indeed , once certification by a physician was mandatory , professional authority grew and release ...
Съдържание
Orientations | 1 |
Cultures of Madness | 33 |
Confinement and its Rationales | 110 |
Авторско право | |
4 други раздела не са показани
Други издания - Преглед на всички
Често срещани думи и фрази
affected Anatomy of Melancholy appear argued asylum attended authority became become Bedlam Bethlem body brain called cause changed claimed common confinement course culture cure developed disease disorder disturbed doctors early eighteenth century England English example experience fact formed George Georgian History Hospital House human Hundred Hunter and Macalpine Ibid ideas idem imagination insanity institutions John Johnson kind later least less Locke London Lunacy lunatics madhouse madness Malady Mary means medicine melancholy mental mind moral nature nerves nervous never nineteenth century Observations organic particular passions patients person physical physician poor Porter practice proved psychiatry Quaker Quoted rational reason regarded remained Retreat Samuel sense social society spirits sufferers suggest therapy thing Thomas thought Three tion treated Treatise treatment turn Visits Wharton writings York