Relational Disability and Invisible Illness in Industrial Britain [0.03%]
工业时代的英国 relational disability 和看不见的疾病研究
Coreen McGuire
Coreen McGuire
Recent historiography has questioned the validity of an "industrialization thesis" that directly links disability to the industrial revolution and the exclusion of nonstandard bodies from factory work. In this article I defend the industria...
When the Tallamys Met John French: Translating, Printing, and Reading The Art of Distillation [0.03%]
塔拉米斯家族与约翰·弗伦奇的相遇:《蒸馏术》的手稿、出版和阅读史
Elaine Leong
Elaine Leong
Centered on the life story of the Tallamy family's copy of John French's The Art of Distillation (London, 1651), this article explores translation, print, and medical reading in early modern England. It traces the adaptation and reuse of te...
Legalities of Healing: Handling Alterities at the Edge of Medicine in France, 1980s-2010s [0.03%]
医疗的合法性:法国1980年代至21世纪10年代医学边缘的异类应对
Emilie Cloatre,Nayeli Urquiza-Haas,Michael Ashworth
Emilie Cloatre
The practice of healing by anyone other than qualified doctors or pharmacists has been allegedly illegal in France since the nineteenth century. In this judicial order, the state delegated the power to oversee the boundaries of medicine to ...
Cold War “Super-Pleasure”: Insatiability, Self-Stimulation, and the Postwar Brain [0.03%]
冷战“超级享乐”:无法满足、自刺激和战后大脑
Otniel E Dror
Otniel E Dror
In this contribution, I study the post–World War II discovery of a new “supramaximal” “super-pleasure” in the brain. I argue that the excessiveness of the newly discovered supramaximal super-pleasure challenged existing models of organ...
How Films Entered the Classroom: The Sciences and the Emotional Education of Youth through Health Education Films in the United States and Germany, 1910–30 [0.03%]
活动影片如何进入教室:美国和德国的健康教育电影及其情感育成(1910-1930)
Anja Laukötter
Anja Laukötter
This essay focuses on health education films in Germany and the United States in the first decades of the twentieth century, illustrating how these films developed their potential as a teaching tool capable of shaping the emotions and chang...
Tempering Madness: Emil Kraepelin’s Research on Affective Disorders [0.03%]
调适狂乱—— Emil Kraepelin 情感障碍研究
Eric J Engstrom
Eric J Engstrom
This essay examines some of the research practices and strategies that the German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin (1856–1926) deployed in his efforts to account for the significance of emotions in psychiatric illnesses. After briefly surveying...
Dolores Martin Moruno
Dolores Martin Moruno
Paolo Mantegazza’s science of emotions represents the dominant style of thinking that was fostered by the late nineteenth-century Italian scientific community, a positivist school that believed that the dissemination of Darwin’s evolution...
Affected Doctors: Dead Bodies and Affective and Professional Cultures in Early Modern European Anatomy [0.03%]
受影响的医生:早期现代欧洲解剖学中的尸体与情感及专业文化
Rafael Mandressi
Rafael Mandressi
From the end of the thirteenth century, when the practice of human anatomical dissections emerged in Europe, the dead body became part of the cultural economy of knowledge. This had epistemic, technical, and social consequences, in which th...
Anne Harrington
Anne Harrington
Most scholarship on the medicalization of emotions has focused on projects that locate emotions, one way or another, within individual brains and minds. The story of mother love and mental illness, in contrast, is a medicalization story tha...
The Feeling Body and Its Diseases: How Cancer Went Psychosomatic in Twentieth-Century German [0.03%]
感受的身体及其疾病:20世纪的德国如何使癌症具有心身性
Bettina Hitzer,Pilar León-Sanz
Bettina Hitzer
This essay examines how psychosomatic medicine, as it emerged between 1920 and 1960, introduced new ideas about the emotional body and the emotional self. Focusing on cancer, a shift can be mapped over the course of the twentieth century. W...