Eric Caplan's fascinating exploration of Victorian culture in the United States shatters the myth of Freud's seminal role in the creation of American psychotherapy. Resurrecting the long-buried "prehistory" of American mental therapeutics, Mind Games tells the remarkable story of how a widely assorted group of actors - none of them hailing from Vienna or from any other European city - compelled a reluctant medical profession to accept a new role for the mind in medicine. By the time Freud first set foot on American soil in 1909, as Caplan demonstrates, psychotherapy was already integrally woven into the fabric of American culture and medicine.What came to be known as psychotherapy emerged in the face of considerable opposition, much - indee...
Largely unacknowledged by historians of the human sciences, late-19th-century psychical researchers ...
for a second psychology, a psychology to complement lab-oratory-based psychology. This second psycho...
While many ancient cultures contributed to our current knowledge about medicine and psychiatry origi...
A contemporary observer of the American medical and cultural landscape during the final decade of th...
Psychological insight is the creed of our time. A quiet academic discipline two generations ago, psy...
and for over two decades it maintained a monolithic hegemony over American psychoanalysis. Within th...
International audienceThe consumption and conception of psychotropes in American culture has often b...
© 2002 Dr. Ann WestmorePsychiatry developed from the practices of nineteenth century medical practit...
“Psychology has stepped down from the university chair into the marketplace” was how the New York Ti...
The incipient therapeutic movements of the late-Victorian and Progressive eras in the US are salient...
The Freud Of Prozac: Tracing Psychotropic Medications Through American Popular Culture, 1950--2000 e...
American psychiatrists and psychologists have long been close colleagues and fierce rivals. There is...
Between the Depression and the mid-1950s the profession of psychiatry in America overcame its histor...
The history of experimental psychology in America is typ-ically told as a series of two Kuhnian revo...
Psychotherapy was an invention of European modernity, but as the 20th century unfolded, and we trace...
Largely unacknowledged by historians of the human sciences, late-19th-century psychical researchers ...
for a second psychology, a psychology to complement lab-oratory-based psychology. This second psycho...
While many ancient cultures contributed to our current knowledge about medicine and psychiatry origi...
A contemporary observer of the American medical and cultural landscape during the final decade of th...
Psychological insight is the creed of our time. A quiet academic discipline two generations ago, psy...
and for over two decades it maintained a monolithic hegemony over American psychoanalysis. Within th...
International audienceThe consumption and conception of psychotropes in American culture has often b...
© 2002 Dr. Ann WestmorePsychiatry developed from the practices of nineteenth century medical practit...
“Psychology has stepped down from the university chair into the marketplace” was how the New York Ti...
The incipient therapeutic movements of the late-Victorian and Progressive eras in the US are salient...
The Freud Of Prozac: Tracing Psychotropic Medications Through American Popular Culture, 1950--2000 e...
American psychiatrists and psychologists have long been close colleagues and fierce rivals. There is...
Between the Depression and the mid-1950s the profession of psychiatry in America overcame its histor...
The history of experimental psychology in America is typ-ically told as a series of two Kuhnian revo...
Psychotherapy was an invention of European modernity, but as the 20th century unfolded, and we trace...
Largely unacknowledged by historians of the human sciences, late-19th-century psychical researchers ...
for a second psychology, a psychology to complement lab-oratory-based psychology. This second psycho...
While many ancient cultures contributed to our current knowledge about medicine and psychiatry origi...