Frederic Truby King (1858-1938) is an eminent figure in New Zealand history. His name continues to flourish in contemporary society, due in part to its affiliation with the Royal New Zealand Plunket Society. However, the general populace is still relatively unaware of the time that King spent employed as the medical superintendent of Seacliff Lunatic Asylum, on the remote outskirts of Dunedin. The prevailing image of King during this period is of a single-minded physician, whose career was in a state of acceleration towards the establishment of Plunket. But historians like Barbara Brookes and Catherine Coleborne have rightly started to establish this epoch as significant in its own right. This thesis extends their work by engaging with prev...
Sir Frederic Truby King's work at Seacliff Asylum in New Zealand, between 1889 and 1922, illustrates...
The use of photography in the field of psychiatry is an eloquent example of the complex evolution of...
A unique series of convict portraits was created at Tasmania’s Port Arthur penal station in 1873 and...
Frederic Truby King (1858-1938) is an eminent figure in New Zealand history. His name continues to f...
While much has been written on the history of psychiatry, remarkably little has been written about p...
The links between mental state and art in all its various forms and media have long been of interest...
Hysteria, although diagnosed since antiquity, was a disease characteristic for the fin de siècle, an...
This paper examines the visual archive of the patient-artist William Bartholomew during his care at ...
The intimate ties connecting photography and psychiatry date back to the late nineteenth century. Ea...
Thousands of New Zealanders were treated in the nation’s mental hospitals in the late nineteenth and...
The book was presented as part of the Artist's Programme at the Light Sensitive Material conference,...
In the development of psychiatric science, patient photographs have been used to classify and visual...
Part of the: E.W. Searle collection of photographs.; Title devised by cataloguer based on caption, a...
137 leaves :ill., facsims ; 30 cm. Bibliography: leaves 134-137. Typescript (photocopied)It is the i...
abstract: By focusing on photojournalists for LIFE and Ladies’ Home Journal, I investigate mental he...
Sir Frederic Truby King's work at Seacliff Asylum in New Zealand, between 1889 and 1922, illustrates...
The use of photography in the field of psychiatry is an eloquent example of the complex evolution of...
A unique series of convict portraits was created at Tasmania’s Port Arthur penal station in 1873 and...
Frederic Truby King (1858-1938) is an eminent figure in New Zealand history. His name continues to f...
While much has been written on the history of psychiatry, remarkably little has been written about p...
The links between mental state and art in all its various forms and media have long been of interest...
Hysteria, although diagnosed since antiquity, was a disease characteristic for the fin de siècle, an...
This paper examines the visual archive of the patient-artist William Bartholomew during his care at ...
The intimate ties connecting photography and psychiatry date back to the late nineteenth century. Ea...
Thousands of New Zealanders were treated in the nation’s mental hospitals in the late nineteenth and...
The book was presented as part of the Artist's Programme at the Light Sensitive Material conference,...
In the development of psychiatric science, patient photographs have been used to classify and visual...
Part of the: E.W. Searle collection of photographs.; Title devised by cataloguer based on caption, a...
137 leaves :ill., facsims ; 30 cm. Bibliography: leaves 134-137. Typescript (photocopied)It is the i...
abstract: By focusing on photojournalists for LIFE and Ladies’ Home Journal, I investigate mental he...
Sir Frederic Truby King's work at Seacliff Asylum in New Zealand, between 1889 and 1922, illustrates...
The use of photography in the field of psychiatry is an eloquent example of the complex evolution of...
A unique series of convict portraits was created at Tasmania’s Port Arthur penal station in 1873 and...