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1.
Contemp Br Hist ; 31(1): 1-23, 2017 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28216996

ABSTRACT

This paper examines the relationship between the gastric illness, 'busman's stomach' and the Coronation bus strike of May 1937 in which 27,000 London busworkers walked out for better working conditions and a seven-and-half-hour day. It explores the way in which new patterns of somatisation, gastroenterological techniques, psychological theories and competing understandings of time worked together to create new political institutions and new forms of political action in inter-war Britain.

2.
Med Hist ; 59(4): 599-624, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26352306

ABSTRACT

Writing the recent history of mental health services requires a conscious departure from the historiographical tropes of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries which have emphasised the experience of those identified (and legally defined) as lunatics and the social, cultural, political, medical and institutional context of their treatment. A historical narrative structured around rights (to health and liberty) is now complicated by the rise of new organising categories such as 'costs', 'risks', 'needs' and 'values'. This paper, drawing on insights from a series of witness seminars attended by historians, clinicians and policymakers, proposes a programme of research to place modern mental health services in England and Wales in a richer historical context. Historians should recognise the fragmentation of the concepts of mental illness and mental health need, acknowledge the relationship between critiques of psychiatry and developments in other intellectual spheres, place the experience of the service user in the context of wider socio-economic and political change, understand the impacts of the social perception of 'risk' and of moral panic on mental health policy, relate the politics of mental health policy and resources to the general determinants of institutional change in British central and local government, and explore the sociological and institutional complexity of the evolving mental health professions and their relationships with each other and with their clients. While this is no small challenge, it is perhaps the only way to avoid the perpetuation of 'single-issue mythologies' in describing and accounting for change.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/history , Mental Health Services/history , Behavioral Research , England , Historiography , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Mental Disorders/therapy , Mental Health Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Psychiatry/history , State Medicine/history , State Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Wales
3.
Hist Human Sci ; 25(5): 3-12, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23626408

ABSTRACT

Although the compound adjective 'psychosocial' was first used by academic psychologists in the 1890s, it was only in the interwar period that psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers began to develop detailed models of the psychosocial domain. These models marked a significant departure from earlier ideas of the relationship between society and human nature. Whereas Freudians and Darwinians had described an antagonistic relationship between biological instincts and social forces, interwar authors insisted that individual personality was made possible through collective organization. This argument was advanced by dissenting psychoanalysts such as Ian Suttie and Karen Horney; biologists including Julian Huxley and Hans Selye; philosophers (e.g. Olaf Stapledon), anthropologists (e.g. Margaret Mead) and physicians (e.g John Ryle and James Halliday). This introduction and the essays that follow sketch out the emergence of the psycho-social by examining the methods, tools and concepts through which it was articulated. New statistical technologies and physiological theories allowed individual pathology to be read as an index of broader social problems and placed medical expertise at the centre of new political programmes. In these arguments the intangible structure of social relationships was made visible and provided a template for the development of healthy and effective forms of social organization. By examining the range of techniques deployed in the construction of the psychosocial (from surveys of civilian neurosis, techniques of family observation through to animal models of psychotic breakdown) a critical genealogy of the biopolitical basis of modern society is developed.

4.
Isis ; 100(4): 827-38, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20380350

ABSTRACT

Emotions maintain an ambivalent position in the economy of science. In contemporary debates they are variously seen as hardwired biological responses, cultural artifacts, or uneasy mixtures of the two. At the same time, there is a tension between the approaches to emotion developed in modern psychotherapies and in the history of science. While historians see the successful ascription of affective states to individuals and populations as a social and technical achievement, the psychodynamic practitioner treats these enduring associations as pathological accidents that need to be overcome. This short essay uses the career of the Glaswegian public health investigator James L. Halliday to examine how debates over the ontological status of the emotions and their durability allow them to travel between individual identity and political economy, making possible new kinds of psychological intervention.


Subject(s)
Emotions , Philosophy/history , Psychology/history , Psychosomatic Medicine/history , Disease Outbreaks/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Influenza, Human/history , Scotland
5.
Lancet ; 372(9654): 1945, 2008 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19059039

Subject(s)
Mass Screening , Semantics
6.
Lancet ; 366(9491): 1071, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16182884
7.
Lancet ; 366(9486): 627, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16112289
9.
Lancet ; 365(9462): 839, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15752517
10.
Lancet ; 364(9433): 495, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15323016
11.
Bull Hist Med ; 78(1): 37-58, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15161086

ABSTRACT

The idea of a conflict between demonology and psychiatry has been a foundational myth in the history of medicine. Nineteenth-century alienists such as J.-M. Charcot and Henry Maudsley developed critiques of supernatural phenomena in an attempt to pathologize religious experience. Modern historians have reanalyzed these critiques, representing them as strategies in medical professionalization. These accounts all maintain an oddly bifurcated approach to the perceived conflict, treating demonology, as a passive and unchanging set of practices, while medicine is depicted as an active and aggressive agent. An examination of early twentieth-century demonological literature reveals a very different story. Fundamentalists and Pentecostalists engaged with the problems of conversion and possession, developing sophisticated models of the normal and the pathological in spiritual experience. Their writings drew upon medical and psychiatric sources ranging widely from Pastorian germ theory to Jacksonian neurology. This article explores the points of contact between the medical and demonological communities in order to demonstrate the contested nature of biomedical innovation.


Subject(s)
Magic/history , Neurology/history , Occultism/history , Psychiatry/history , Religion and Medicine , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , United Kingdom
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