Thesis advisor: Rosemarie BodenheimerBy focusing on the predominance of semi-conscious and unconscious states in both nineteenth-century British literature and psychology, this dissertation outlines the recognizable and multi-faceted relation existing between literature and psychology. Besides their obvious prevalence in sensation novels later in the period, these states, which I call ecstatic states, appeared in many of the most prominent, canonical novels of the nineteenth century. Prominent Victorian psychologists, such as Robert MacNish, John Abercrombie, James Cowles Prichard, and Forbes Winslow among others, connected ecstatic states, including fiction reading, to insanity, since these states exhibited an underlying component of self...
This thesis is an examination of the history of mental health treatment for women in the 19th centur...
This dissertation makes two arguments: First, it elaborates a depressive genealogy of the Victorian ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012My dissertation examines the emergence of a new langua...
This dissertation, A Psychoanalytical Reading of Female Madness in Selected Victorian Literature, ar...
“Vulnerability: Sensation and Subjectivity in the Late Victorian Novel” explores how developments in...
This dissertation explores the tensions between an empirical epistemology and an intuitive method of...
Victorians in Britain believed, following the Romantics, that vision facilitated sympathy, or knowle...
Thesis advisor: Judith WiltThis project argues that the concept of haunting pervaded Victorian socie...
Taking as my point of departure the generally accepted version of Victorian sympathy predicated on d...
This thesis is about the nineteenth-century psychiatric idea, monomania, in medical, literary and po...
This dissertation looks at nineteenth-century British writers who developed strategies for making us...
Madness has always been a difficult concept to define as different sorts of behaviors have been cons...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on August 28, 2012).The entir...
From the mad heroines of classic Victorian literature to the depictions of female insanity in modern...
This interdisciplinary study in comparative literature reconceptualizes hypnosis as an aesthetic act...
This thesis is an examination of the history of mental health treatment for women in the 19th centur...
This dissertation makes two arguments: First, it elaborates a depressive genealogy of the Victorian ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012My dissertation examines the emergence of a new langua...
This dissertation, A Psychoanalytical Reading of Female Madness in Selected Victorian Literature, ar...
“Vulnerability: Sensation and Subjectivity in the Late Victorian Novel” explores how developments in...
This dissertation explores the tensions between an empirical epistemology and an intuitive method of...
Victorians in Britain believed, following the Romantics, that vision facilitated sympathy, or knowle...
Thesis advisor: Judith WiltThis project argues that the concept of haunting pervaded Victorian socie...
Taking as my point of departure the generally accepted version of Victorian sympathy predicated on d...
This thesis is about the nineteenth-century psychiatric idea, monomania, in medical, literary and po...
This dissertation looks at nineteenth-century British writers who developed strategies for making us...
Madness has always been a difficult concept to define as different sorts of behaviors have been cons...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on August 28, 2012).The entir...
From the mad heroines of classic Victorian literature to the depictions of female insanity in modern...
This interdisciplinary study in comparative literature reconceptualizes hypnosis as an aesthetic act...
This thesis is an examination of the history of mental health treatment for women in the 19th centur...
This dissertation makes two arguments: First, it elaborates a depressive genealogy of the Victorian ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012My dissertation examines the emergence of a new langua...