An edition of The psychiatric persuasion (1994)

The psychiatric persuasion

knowledge, gender, and power in modern America

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 25, 2024 | History
An edition of The psychiatric persuasion (1994)

The psychiatric persuasion

knowledge, gender, and power in modern America

  • 1 Want to read

In the years between 1900 and 1930, American psychiatrists transformed their profession from a marginal science focused primarily on the care of the mentally ill into a powerful discipline concerned with analyzing the common difficulties of everyday life. How did psychiatrists effect such a dramatic change in their profession's fortunes and aims? How did their new cultural authority affect their relationship with their patients?

How did they treat social workers, all of them women, who were striving to develop their own professional identities? In answering these questions, Elizabeth Lunbeck focuses on the revelatory ideas of gender that structured the new "psychiatry of the normal," a field that grew to take the whole world of human endeavor as its object.

Lunbeck locates her study in early twentieth-century Boston, providing a vivid picture not only of the Boston Psychopathic Hospital, upon whose patient records she has drawn extensively, but also of the increasingly urbanized society that shaped its goals and practices.

These Boston psychiatrists made strenuous attempts to deal with the treatment of syphilis and with other newly urgent social issues, such as immigration, poverty, delinquency, and drunkenness. More significantly they gained unprecedented entree into the private realm of the home. Lunbeck follows psychiatrists as they turned the problems they identified there - sexuality, marriage, relations between the sexes - into the stuff of their science.

In the process, issues of gender and personal identity assumed a new prominence in psychiatric thought.

Lunbeck's sweeping narrative, in fact, deals not just with the development of psychiatry but with the uncertain and often stormy advent of sexual modernity, a modernity that many have suggested was enabled by psychiatry. The new psychiatry would continue to deal with recognized mental illness, but the question of what and who was normal increasingly would engage the psychiatrist's interest.

As an explanation of how this came to be so, this book will interest students of the history of psychiatry and of science, as well as those readers concerned with gender issues and the development of American culture in general.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
431

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: The psychiatric persuasion
The psychiatric persuasion: knowledge, gender, and power in modern America
1994, Princeton University Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. [327]-418) and index.

Published in
Princeton, N.J

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
616.89/00973
Library of Congress
RC437.5 .L89 1994, RC437.5.L89 1994

The Physical Object

Pagination
xiv, 431 p. :
Number of pages
431

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1432300M
Internet Archive
psychiatricpersu0000lunb
ISBN 10
0691048045
LCCN
93043818
OCLC/WorldCat
29359837
Library Thing
1205833
Goodreads
2003030

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