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Books
Available
Publication year: 2007
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| Series: | History of Science and Medicine Library, 2 |
| ISBN-13 (i)The ISBN (International Standard Book Number) has been changed from 10 to 13 digits on 1 January 2007: | 978 90 04 16075 0 |
| ISBN-10: | 90 04 16075 2 |
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| Cover: | Hardback |
| Number of pages: | xiv, 392 pp. |
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| List price: | € 99.00 / US$ 147.00 |
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Table of contents
Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations
Introduction: The Age of Nervousness
PART I. MEDICALISED MODERNITY 1. On the Swedish Path to Modernity 2. How Swedes Became Nervous 3. Weak Nerves, Degeneration and Racial Hygiene: Health Ideology in the Age of Nervousness 4. Masters of Psychomedical Reality: Neurosis and the Medical Profession
PART II. FROM THE AGE OF NERVOUSNESS TO THE ERA OF PSYCHOCULTURE 5. Feminity, Sexuality and Childhood: Sources of the Nervous Self 6. Remedies for Nervousness 7. The Culture of Complexes
PART III. DOCTORS, PATIENTS AND THE STATE 8. On the Shattered Nerves of Dr Lennmalm’s Private Patients 9. Nervousness with Tears: Patients at the ‘Nerve Clinic’ 10. How to Turn Neurotics into Productive Citizens
Conclusion: Neurosis as a Contagious Diagnosis
Bibliography Index
Readership
All those interested in the history of medicine, psychiatry and psychoanalysis, as well as cultural and intellectual historians of the modern age, sociologists, psychiatrists, psychologists and students of these disciplines.
About the author(s)
Petteri Pietikainen, Ph.D. (1999) in History, University of Helsinki, has published extensively on modern medical and intellectual history, including C. G. Jung and the Psychology of the Symbolic Forms (1999) and Alchemists of Human Nature.
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In late nineteenth-century Sweden, paths to modernity created socio-cultural conditions conducive to the dissemination of the language of nerves. This book shows how neurosis became an extremely contagious diagnosis, and how our modern language of discontent, stress and malaise has a history that goes back to the birth of modern neuroses in the 1880s. Hysteria, neurasthenia, psychoneurosis and other neuroses spread from middle-class women to all segments of the Swedish population, and by the mid-1950s nobody was safe from the medico-cultural virus of neurosis. While offering the first historical analysis of the ways in which neuroses became a national malady in Sweden, this book illustrates and analyses general aspects of social and cultural history during the Age of Nervousness.
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