Show
12 citations
related to McCandless, Peter
Show
12 citations
related to McCandless, Peter as an author
Review
Peter McCandless
(2018)
Review of "Scurvy: The Disease of Discovery".
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences.
(/isis/citation/CBB890676403/)
Book
McCandless, Peter
(2011)
Slavery, Disease, and Suffering in the Southern Lowcountry.
(/isis/citation/CBB001250977/)
Review
McCandless, Peter
(2005)
Review of "Madness, Malingering, and Malfeasance: The Transformation of Psychiatry and the Law in the Civil War Era".
Bulletin of the History of Medicine.
(/isis/citation/CBB000630135/)
Book
McCandless, Peter
(1996)
Moonlight, magnolias, and madness: Insanity in South Carolina from the colonial period to the Progressive Era.
(/isis/citation/CBB000069019/)
Article
McCandless, Peter
(1992)
Mesmerism and phrenology in antebellum Charleston: “Enough of the marvellous”.
Journal of Southern History
(pp. 199-230).
(/isis/citation/CBB000042196/)
Essay Review
McCandless, Peter
(1992)
The matter of madness: Perspectives on the history of psychiatry.
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences.
(/isis/citation/CBB000049887/)
Article
McCandless, Peter
(1990)
“A house of cure”: The antebellum South Carolina Lunatic Asylum.
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
(pp. 220-242).
(/isis/citation/CBB000054433/)
Article Centenary issue (1984). British Journal of Addiction (to Alcohol and other Drugs) (pp. 1-119). (/isis/citation/CBB000036983/)
Book
Scull, Andrew
(1981)
Madhouses, mad-doctors, and madmen: The social history of psychiatry in the Victorian era.
(/isis/citation/CBB000020379/)
Article
McCandless, Peter
(1979)
“Build! Build!”: The controversy over the care of the chronically insane in England, 1855-1870.
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
(pp. 553-574).
(/isis/citation/CBB000004266/)
Article
McCandless, Peter
(1978)
Liberty and lunacy: The Victorians and wrongful confinement.
Journal of Social History
(pp. 366-386).
(/isis/citation/CBB000016090/)
Thesis
McCandless, Peter
(1974)
Insanity and society: A study of the English Lunacy Reform Movement, 1815-1870.
(/isis/citation/CBB001563918/)
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