Show
87 citations
related to Mental health and illness
Show
87 citations
related to Mental health and illness as a subject or category
Book
David Bolton
(2025)
Conflict, peace and mental health: A case study from Northern Ireland on addressing trauma and loss: Second edition.
(/p/isis/citation/CBB088821502/)
Article
Eoin Fullam
(2025)
How does a mental health chatbot work? A ‘conversation design’ concept of mental health intervention.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 75-97).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB288388871/)
Article
Matthew Perkins-McVey
(2025)
That men should put an enemy in their mouths to steal away their brains: Reconsidering the origins of model psychosis.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 129-155).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB928425138/)
Chapter
Christopher M. Rudeen; Rachel Elder; Thomas Schlich
(2025)
'Mental health is not fashion': RIP shirts, stigma, and consumerism.
In: Technology, health, and the patient consumer in the twentieth century.
(/p/isis/citation/CBB579121649/)
Book
Giovanni Vito Distefano
(2025)
Alle origini letterarie del manicomio. L'Ospidale de' pazzi incurabili di Tomaso Garzoni.
(/p/isis/citation/CBB031463357/)
Book
Dr Martin Halliwell
(2024)
Transformed States: Medicine, Biotechnology, and American Culture, 1990–2020.
(/p/isis/citation/CBB788357700/)
Article
Leonard Smith
(2024)
The saga of James Lucett and the process for curing insanity, Part 2 (1814–38): ‘Insanity cured’.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 259-274).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB748545834/)
Article
Haszira Muhamad Yusof; Azlizan Mat Enh; Suffian Mansor
(2024)
A history of mental illness among women in the Straits Settlements in the nineteenth century.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 309-322).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB474728721/)
Article
Chiara Thumiger
(2024)
Phrenitis and the pathology of the mind in western medical thought (fifth century BCE to twentieth century CE).
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 355-362).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB706277540/)
Book
Gerald R. Gems
(2024)
Mental Health, Gender, and the Rise of Sport.
(/p/isis/citation/CBB616371396/)
Article
Stanley Finger; Elisabetta Sirgiovanni
(2024)
The electrified artist: Edvard Munch’s demons, treatments, and sketch of an electrotherapy session (1908–1909).
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences
(pp. 241-274).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB670443220/)
Book
Cate I. Reilly
(2024)
Psychic Empire: Literary Modernism and the Clinical State.
(/p/isis/citation/CBB744476288/)
Article
Leonard Smith
(2024)
The saga of James Lucett and the process for curing insanity, Part 1 (1811–14): The rise and fall of Delahoyde and Lucett.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 125-140).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB888827030/)
Article
Mark McCarthy
(2024)
De lunatico inquirendo: Managing family inheritance across madness in eighteenth-century London.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 234-242).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB549808153/)
Article
Clemens Ableidinger
(2024)
Whose experts? How federalism shaped psychiatry in the late Habsburg monarchy.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 158-176).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB515745084/)
Article
Verusca Calabria; Lynsey T Cullen
(2024)
Deinstitutionalisation and the move to community care: comparing the changing dimensions of mental healthcare after 1922 in the Republic of Ireland and England.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 141-157).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB769269375/)
Article
Valentina Badano
(2024)
The Basaglia Law. Returning dignity to psychiatric patients: the historical, political and social factors that led to the closure of psychiatric hospitals in Italy in 1978.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 226-233).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB096588182/)
Book
Gundula Gahlen; Volker Hess; Marianna Scarfone; et al.
(2024)
Doing psychiatry in postwar Europe: Practices, routines and experiences.
(/p/isis/citation/CBB646106222/)
Article
Des O’Rawe
(2024)
Contrary to reason: Documentary film-making and alternative psychotherapies.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 166-183).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB323627324/)
Article
Matthew Smith
(2024)
Psychiatric epidemiology and the Chicago School of Sociology.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 11-29).
(/p/isis/citation/CBB042033094/)
Be the first to comment!