Article ID: CBB001551433

A Drifting Concept for an Unruly Menace: A History of Psychopathy in Germany (2015)

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The term “psychopath” has enjoyed wide currency both in popular culture and among specialists in forensic psychiatry. Historians, however, have generally neglected the subject. This essay examines the history of psychopathy in the country that first coined the term, developed the concept, and debated its treatment: Germany. While the notion can be traced to nineteenth-century psychiatric ideas about abnormal, yet not completely pathological, character traits, the figure of the psychopath emerged out of distinctly twentieth-century preoccupations and institutions. The vagueness and plasticity of the diagnosis of psychopathy proved to be one of the keys to its success, as it was embraced and employed by clinicians, researchers, and the mass media, despite attempts by some to curb its use. Within the span of a few decades, the image of the psychopath became one of a perpetual troublemaker, an individual who could not be managed within any institutional setting. By midcentury, psychopaths were no longer seen as simply nosological curiosities; rather, they were spatial problems, individuals whose defiance of institutional routine and attempts at social redemption stood in for an attributed mental status. The history of psychopathy therefore reveals how public dangers and risks can be shaped and defined by institutional limitations.

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Authors & Contributors
Revuelta, José I. Pérez
Moreno, José M. Villagrán
Stahnisch, Frank W.
Kumazaki, Tsutomu
Faschi, Viviana
Daker, Mauricio V.
Journals
History of Psychiatry
Medicina Historica
Sudhoffs Archiv: Zeitschrift fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte
NTM: Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Technik und Medizin
Medizinhistorisches Journal
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Publishers
University of California Press
Schmidt-Römhild
Concepts
Psychiatry
Mental disorders and diseases
Psychopathology
Psychology
Clinical psychology
Therapeutic practice; therapy; treatment
People
Jaspers, Karl
Moreau de Tours, Jacques Joseph
Weber, Karl Jakob
Snell, Ludwig
Rüdin, Ernst
Oppenheim, Hermann
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
21st century
Places
Germany
Strasbourg (France)
United States
North America
France
Europe
Institutions
Reichsuniversität Strassburg
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