The Female Malady: Women, Madness, and English Culture, 1830-1980This incisive study explores how cultural ideas about proper feminine behavior have shaped the definition and treatment of madness in women as it traces trends in the psychiatric care of women in England from 1830-1980. |
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Page 6
... psychiatric career and of the society's psychiatric institu- tions . Although anyone who writes about the history of madness must owe an intellectual debt to Michel Foucault , his critique of institutional power in Madness and ...
... psychiatric career and of the society's psychiatric institu- tions . Although anyone who writes about the history of madness must owe an intellectual debt to Michel Foucault , his critique of institutional power in Madness and ...
Page 17
... psychiatry : psychiatric Victorianism ( 1830-1870 ) , psychiatric Darwinism ( 1870-1920 ) , and psychiatric modernism ( 1920-1980 ) .34 The terms for these phases are intended to suggest the continuity between major periods of ...
... psychiatry : psychiatric Victorianism ( 1830-1870 ) , psychiatric Darwinism ( 1870-1920 ) , and psychiatric modernism ( 1920-1980 ) .34 The terms for these phases are intended to suggest the continuity between major periods of ...
Page 19
... psychiatric thought , and by the careers of those individual physicians who not only dominated their generation's thinking but also transformed the social role of the psychiatrist in line with the age's cultural ideals . John Con- olly ...
... psychiatric thought , and by the careers of those individual physicians who not only dominated their generation's thinking but also transformed the social role of the psychiatrist in line with the age's cultural ideals . John Con- olly ...
Contents
John Conolly and Moral Management | 23 |
The Rise of the Victorian Madwoman | 51 |
Managing Womens Minds | 74 |
Copyright | |
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Allbutt Anna antipsychiatry became Bethlem Books breakdown Breuer British Brontë career Cassandra century Charcot clinic Colney Hatch confinement Conolly's Crazy Jane cultural Daniel Hack Tuke Darwinian depression doctors Dora emotional England English experience female insanity female malady female patients feminine feminism feminist Figure Freud gender girls Hanwell Henry Maudsley History hospital Hunter and Macalpine hysteria hysterical Ibid inmates institutions intellectual John Conolly Journal Kingsley Hall Laing's Laingian London Lunacy lunatic asylums madhouse madness madwoman male Mary Barnes masculine Maudsley's Medicine moral management mother nervous neurasthenia Neuroses Nightingale nineteenth-century novel nurses Ophelia photographs physical physician political private asylums psychiatric psychoanalysis Psychological puerperal R. D. Laing rest cure role Salpêtrière sanity Sassoon schizophrenia Scull sexual shell shock social society symptoms theory therapeutic therapy Tuke University Press Victorian Victorian asylum Victorian psychiatry W. H. R. Rivers woman women patients Woolf writing wrote Wynter Yealland York