This article examines the use of cinematic microanalysis to capture, decompose, and interpret mother–infant interaction in the decades following the Second World War. Focusing on the films and writings of Margaret Mead, Ray Birdwhistell, René Spitz, and Sylvia Brody, it examines the intellectual culture, and visual methodologies, that transformed ‘pathogenic’ mothering into an observable process. In turn, it argues that the significance assigned to the ‘small behaviours’ of mothers provided an epistemological foundation for the nascent discipline of infant psychiatry. This research draws attention to two new areas of enquiry within the history of emotions and the history of psychiatry in the post-war period: preoccupation with emotional abs...
This autoethnography wanders into one academic social worker’s reflections on her doctoral training ...
This paper will outline a piece of research that did not aim primarily to use a narrative approach ...
A small child is getting ready for school. His mother dresses him, pulling his jacket over his shoul...
In the decades after 1945, the psychic life of the infant moved to the centre of debates about the c...
Over the past century, images of “bad” mothers have multiplied, and increasing numbers of mothers an...
PhDAfter the Second World War mothering became an object of social, political, medical and psychiat...
In a child’s life, “how early do important things happen?” asked child psychoanalyst D.W.Winnicott i...
This thesis entitled Mothering and Mental illness: An Ethnography of Attachment in an Institutional ...
Introduction and aims: Mental health vulnerability emerges out of the interaction between the qual...
It was for the longest time that the mother in Freud troubled me. Unlike some feminist psychoanalys...
This article explores the emotional impact on the viewer of disturbing and disorienting images of in...
This book argues that mid-twentieth-century British psychoanalysis served as a major force in creati...
Drawing on the writings of Luc Boltanski on moral spectatorship and a change to Boltanski’s politics...
This chapter was requested by the editors following the presentation of a paper at the Film & Histor...
This dissertation investigates the cultural production and lived meanings of the identity ‘autism mo...
This autoethnography wanders into one academic social worker’s reflections on her doctoral training ...
This paper will outline a piece of research that did not aim primarily to use a narrative approach ...
A small child is getting ready for school. His mother dresses him, pulling his jacket over his shoul...
In the decades after 1945, the psychic life of the infant moved to the centre of debates about the c...
Over the past century, images of “bad” mothers have multiplied, and increasing numbers of mothers an...
PhDAfter the Second World War mothering became an object of social, political, medical and psychiat...
In a child’s life, “how early do important things happen?” asked child psychoanalyst D.W.Winnicott i...
This thesis entitled Mothering and Mental illness: An Ethnography of Attachment in an Institutional ...
Introduction and aims: Mental health vulnerability emerges out of the interaction between the qual...
It was for the longest time that the mother in Freud troubled me. Unlike some feminist psychoanalys...
This article explores the emotional impact on the viewer of disturbing and disorienting images of in...
This book argues that mid-twentieth-century British psychoanalysis served as a major force in creati...
Drawing on the writings of Luc Boltanski on moral spectatorship and a change to Boltanski’s politics...
This chapter was requested by the editors following the presentation of a paper at the Film & Histor...
This dissertation investigates the cultural production and lived meanings of the identity ‘autism mo...
This autoethnography wanders into one academic social worker’s reflections on her doctoral training ...
This paper will outline a piece of research that did not aim primarily to use a narrative approach ...
A small child is getting ready for school. His mother dresses him, pulling his jacket over his shoul...