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Making Minds and Madness: From Hysteria to Depression

Cambridge University Press (2009)

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  1. Imposing Order to See the Disorder: Student Depression and T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land: A (Mis)reading/Diagnosis.Joel Hawkes - 2018 - Journal of Medical Humanities 39 (4):455-471.
    Sometime ago, I found myself using the diagnosis of a student’s depression as a critical tool of interpretation, searching for signs of mental illness in her essay that explored order and disorder in T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land. I realised that my reading had become a creative act, combining poem, poet, student essay and author to create, in a sense, one (un)readable text. The present paper is a reflection upon the processes of order and disorder located in a diagnosis (...)
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  • “A Hideous Torture on Himself”: Madness and Self-Mutilation in Victorian Literature. [REVIEW]Sarah Chaney - 2011 - Journal of Medical Humanities 32 (4):279-289.
    This paper suggests that late nineteenth-century definitions of self-mutilation, a new category of psychiatric symptomatology, were heavily influenced by the use of self-injury as a rhetorical device in the novel, for the literary text held a high status in Victorian psychology. In exploring Dimmesdale’s “self-mutilation” in The Scarlet Letter in conjunction with psychiatric case histories, the paper indicates a number of common techniques and themes in literary and psychiatric texts. As well as illuminating key elements of nineteenth-century conceptions of the (...)
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