In nineteenth-century France, science and religion have often been portrayed as irredeemably opposed to one another. This article seeks to revise this interpretation by showing how these apparently dissonant views intermingled in the study of hysteria. Through a survey of attitudes towards Catholicism and in their treatment of Catholic patients, the article shows how French psychiatrists and neurologists were deeply indebted to religious iconography and experience, despite their vehement anti-clericalism. Because of their hatred of the church, they focused on the treatment of female hysterics who manifested 'religious' symptoms - demonopathy, mystical states, and stigmata - in order to amass conclusive evidence of Catholic 'superstition'. T...
In the late 1870s, a small group of Italian psychiatrists became interested in hypnotism in the wake...
In Catholic culture, and especially within the Italian Catholic environment, there has recently been...
International audienceFrom the early nineteenth century in France, the treatment of hysteria was con...
In nineteenth-century France, science and religion have often been portrayed as irredeemably opposed...
Professor Jean-Martin Charcot was the founder of clinical neurology and one of the prominent researc...
During the second half of the XXth century, the bewitch’s discourse cannot be any more understood in...
This thesis explores the experience, interpretation and treatment of religious beliefs and behaviour...
This article explores how intransigent Catholics used ecstatic experiences, in particular ecstatic p...
Across a broad range of late nineteenth-century French medical texts that described the newly denote...
Throughout the nineteenth century, a growing part of the French medical field focuses on this specif...
International audienceThe interactions between developing neurology and psychiatry in Paris are of i...
International audienceThis paper considers how certain ideas elaborated by the Montpellier vitalists...
In 1880s France, hypnotism enjoyed unique medico-scientific legitimacy. This was in striking contras...
Contrary to the widely held belief in the humanities that hysteria no longer exists, this article sh...
The aim of this article is to contribute to the analysis of the origins of psychiatric semiology, wh...
In the late 1870s, a small group of Italian psychiatrists became interested in hypnotism in the wake...
In Catholic culture, and especially within the Italian Catholic environment, there has recently been...
International audienceFrom the early nineteenth century in France, the treatment of hysteria was con...
In nineteenth-century France, science and religion have often been portrayed as irredeemably opposed...
Professor Jean-Martin Charcot was the founder of clinical neurology and one of the prominent researc...
During the second half of the XXth century, the bewitch’s discourse cannot be any more understood in...
This thesis explores the experience, interpretation and treatment of religious beliefs and behaviour...
This article explores how intransigent Catholics used ecstatic experiences, in particular ecstatic p...
Across a broad range of late nineteenth-century French medical texts that described the newly denote...
Throughout the nineteenth century, a growing part of the French medical field focuses on this specif...
International audienceThe interactions between developing neurology and psychiatry in Paris are of i...
International audienceThis paper considers how certain ideas elaborated by the Montpellier vitalists...
In 1880s France, hypnotism enjoyed unique medico-scientific legitimacy. This was in striking contras...
Contrary to the widely held belief in the humanities that hysteria no longer exists, this article sh...
The aim of this article is to contribute to the analysis of the origins of psychiatric semiology, wh...
In the late 1870s, a small group of Italian psychiatrists became interested in hypnotism in the wake...
In Catholic culture, and especially within the Italian Catholic environment, there has recently been...
International audienceFrom the early nineteenth century in France, the treatment of hysteria was con...