Results for ' hysteria'

221 found
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  1. Hysteria, race, and phlogiston. A model of ontological elimination in the human sciences.David Ludwig - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 45 (1):68-77.
    Elimination controversies are ubiquitous in philosophy and the human sciences. For example, it has been suggested that human races, hysteria, intelligence, mental disorder, propositional attitudes such as beliefs and desires, the self, and the super-ego should be eliminated from the list of respectable entities in the human sciences. I argue that eliminativist proposals are often presented in the framework of an oversimplified “phlogiston model” and suggest an alternative account that describes ontological elimination on a gradual scale between criticism of (...)
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  2.  94
    Hysteria, Race, Phlogiston. A Model of Ontological Elimination in the Human Sciences.David Ludwig - 2013 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences (1):68-77.
    Elimination controversies are ubiquitous in philosophy and the human sciences. For example, it has been suggested that human races, hysteria, intelligence, mental disorder, propositional attitudes such as beliefs and desires, the self, and the super-ego should be eliminated from the list of respectable entities in the human sciences. I argue that eliminativist proposals are often presented in the framework of an oversimplified “phlogiston model” and suggest an alternative account that describes ontological elimination on a gradual scale between criticism of (...)
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  3.  76
    Mass Hysteria: Medicine, Culture, and Mothers' Bodies.Rebecca Kukla - 2005 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Mass Hysteria examines the medical and cultural practices surrounding pregnancy, new motherhood, and infant feeding. Late eighteenth century transformations in these practices reshaped mothers' bodies, and contemporary norms and routines of prenatal care and early motherhood have inherited the legacy of that era. As a result, mothers are socially positioned in ways that can make it difficult for them to establish and maintain healthy and safe boundaries and appropriate divisions between public and private space.
  4. Hysteria and Mechanical Man.John P. Wright - 1980 - Journal of the History of Ideas 41 (2):233.
    In this article I contrast 17th and 18th explanations of hysteria including those of Sydenham and Willis with those given by Plato and pre-modern medicine. I show that beginning in the second decade of the 17th century the locus of the disorder was transferred to the nervous system and it was no longer connected with the womb as in Hippocrates and Galen; hysteria became identified with hypochondria, and was a disease contracted by men as well as women. I (...)
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  5. Hysteria: the reverse of anosognosia.Frédérique De Vignemont - unknown
    Hysteria has been the subject of controversy for many years, with theorists arguing about whether it is best explained by a hidden organic cause or by malingering and deception. However, it has been shown that hysterical paralysis cannot be explained in any of these terms. With the recent development of cognitive psychiatry, one may understand psychiatric and organic delusions within the same conceptual framework. Here I contrast hysterical conversion with anosognosia. They are indeed remarkably similar, though the content of (...)
     
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  6.  67
    Connectionist hysteria: Reducing a Freudian case study to a network model.Dan Lloyd - 1994 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 1 (2):69-88.
    Connectionism—also known as parallel distributed processing, or neural network modeling—offers promise as a framework to unite clinical and cognitive psychology, and as a tool for studying conscious and unconscious mental activity. This paper describes a neural network model of the case study of Lucy R., from Freud and Breuer's Studies on Hysteria. Though very simple in architecture, the network spontaneously displays analogues of repression and hallucination, corresponding to Lucy R.'s symptoms. Salient elements of Lucy's conscious experience are represented in (...)
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  7.  5
    Hysteria.Christopher Bollas - 1999 - Routledge.
    Hysteria has disappeared from contemporary culture only insofar as it has been subjected to a repression through the popular diagnosis of 'borderline personality disorder'. In _Hysteria_ the distinguished psychoanalyst Christopher Bollas offers an original and illuminating theory of hysteria that weaves its well-known features - repressed sexual ideas; indifference to conversion; over-identification with the other - into the hysteric form. Through a rereading of Freud, Bollas argues that sexuality in itself is traumatic to all children, as it 'destroys' (...)
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  8.  28
    Hysteria and the end of carnival: Festivity and bourgeois neurosis.Allon White - 1985 - Semiotica 54 (1-2):97-112.
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  9. Can Hysteria Be Equated to the Oedipal Complex?Roberto Harari - 2007 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 13:9.
     
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  10.  8
    Hysteria and Histrionics: Nietzsche, Wagner and the Pathology of Genius.Gregory Moore - 2001 - Nietzsche Studien 30:246-266.
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  11. Hysteria, Feminism, and the Case of The Bostonians.Claire Kahane - 1989 - In Richard Feldstein & Judith Roof (eds.), Feminism and psychoanalysis. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. pp. 280--97.
  12.  13
    Invention of Hysteria: Charcot and the Photographic Iconography of the Salpêtrière.Georges Didi-Huberman - 2003 - MIT Press.
    The first English-language publication of a classic French book on the relationship between the development of photography and of the medical category of hysteria. In this classic of French cultural studies, Georges Didi-Huberman traces the intimate and reciprocal relationship between the disciplines of psychiatry and photography in the late nineteenth century. Focusing on the immense photographic output of the Salpetriere hospital, the notorious Parisian asylum for insane and incurable women, Didi-Huberman shows the crucial role played by photography in the (...)
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  13.  39
    Fetishism and Hysteria: The Economies of Feminism Ex Uterod.Susan Squier - 2000 - Journal of Medical Humanities 21 (2):59-69.
    Laurie Foos's feminist novel Ex Utero is a comic exploration of the value of the uterus. Simultaneously recursive and resistant, Foos's novel reenacts, with a difference, two confining essentialisms: hysteria, a female disorder, and fetishism, whether understood as the psychosexual response to female lack, or as capitalism's motor, the displacement of desire onto commodities. The essay explores how, if we think of the womb neither as individual possession or commodified object, we can create a new space of possibility for (...)
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  14.  17
    Hysteria, Alternating Personality, Paramnesia, Thought-Transference.No Authorship Indicated - 1894 - Psychological Review 1 (3):315-318.
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  15.  4
    The Nature of Hysteria.Niel Micklem - 1995 - Routledge.
    Hysteria was a frequently diagnosed illness in the West through the nineteenth and much of the twentieth century. Today the medical profession has virtually abandoned the diagnosis altogether. However, this does not mean that hysteria has ceased to exist. In _The Nature of Hysteria_, Niel Micklem argues that the disease has merely shifted into other personal and collective forms. He traces the history of hysteria from ancient Egyptian times to the present and examines its mythic background. He (...)
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  16.  5
    The Nature of Hysteria.Niel Micklem - 1995 - Routledge.
    Hysteria was a frequently diagnosed illness in the West through the nineteenth and much of the twentieth century. Today the medical profession has virtually abandoned the diagnosis altogether. However, this does not mean that hysteria has ceased to exist. In _The Nature of Hysteria_, Niel Micklem argues that the disease has merely shifted into other personal and collective forms. He traces the history of hysteria from ancient Egyptian times to the present and examines its mythic background. He (...)
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  17.  13
    Stigma, Hysteria, and HIV.Wendy E. Parmet - 2008 - Hastings Center Report 38 (5):57-57.
  18. Hysteria.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1992 - In Elizabeth Wright (ed.), Feminism and psychoanalysis: a critical dictionary. Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell. pp. 163--66.
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  19.  27
    Hysteria and Histrionics: Nietzsche, Wagner and the Pathology of Genius.Gregory Moore - 2001 - Nietzsche Studien 30 (1):246-266.
  20.  17
    Approaching Hysteria: Disease and Its Interpretations. Mark S. Micale.Hannah S. Decker - 1997 - Isis 88 (4):696-697.
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  21. 18. Hysteria and conversion.Christopher J. Mace - 1994 - In Edmund Michael R. Critchley (ed.), The Neurological Boundaries of Reality. Farrand. pp. 287.
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  22.  9
    Hysteria and gender.Željka Matijašević - 2005 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 25 (4):829-839.
  23. Erotic melancholia and hysteria. [Spanish].Paul Mengal - 2003 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 1:110-127.
    En este ensayo se presenta la genealogía de las nociones de melancolía erótica e histeria a través del estudio de textos de la medicina abarcando desde la antigüedad hasta el siglo XIX.
     
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  24. Hysteria.Gilles Deleuze - 2010 - In Christopher Want (ed.), Philosophers on Art From Kant to the Postmodernists: A Critical Reader. Columbia University Press.
     
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  25.  4
    Revisiting Hysteria and the Will to Power.Matt Gildersleeve - 2019 - New Nietzsche Studies 11 (1):21-44.
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  26.  17
    Hysteria Studies.Judith Grant - 1999 - Theory and Event 3 (3).
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  27.  24
    A Case of Hysteria.Sigmund Freud - 2013 - Oxford University Press UK.
    'I very soon had an opportunity to interpret Dora's nervous coughing as the outcome of a fantasized sexual situation.'A Case of Hysteria, popularly known as the Dora Case, affords a rare insight into how Freud dealt with patients and interpreted what they told him. The 18-year-old 'Dora' was sent for psychoanalysis by her father after threatening suicide; as Freud's enquiries deepened, he uncovered a remarkably unhappy and conflict-ridden family, with several competing versions of their story. The narrative became a (...)
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  28. Painting as Hysteria: Deleuze on Bacon.Tomas Geyskens - 2008 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 2 (2):140-154.
    Deleuze's work on Francis Bacon is an aesthetic clinic of hysteria and an implicit critique of the psychoanalytic conception of hysteria. Bacon's paintings reveal what is at stake in hysteria: not the symbolic expression of unconscious representations, but the pure presence of the body, the experience of the body under the organism. Inspired by the work of the phenomenologist Henri Maldiney, Deleuze argues that Bacon's paintings become non-figurative without being abstract. In this way, painting shows the hysterical (...)
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  29.  13
    Social hysteria and social psychoanalysis: A response to Brion'sThe Hidden Persistence of Witchcraft.David S. Caudill - 1994 - Law and Critique 5 (1):31-51.
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  30. The New Hysteria: Borderline Personality Disorder and Epistemic Injustice.Natalie Dorfman & Joel Michael Reynolds - 2023 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 16 (2):162-181.
    The diagnostic category of borderline personality disorder (BPD) has come under increasing criticism in recent years. In this paper, we analyze the role and impact of epistemic injustice, specifically testimonial injustice, in relation to the diagnosis of BPD. We first offer a critical sociological and historical account, detailing and expanding a range of arguments that BPD is problematic nosologically. We then turn to explore the epistemic injustices that can result from a BPD diagnosis, showing how they can lead to experiences (...)
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  31.  32
    The Head, the Heart, and Hysteria in Jeanne Flore's Tales and Trials of Love.Kelly Digby Peebles - 2018 - Journal of Medical Humanities 39 (1):73-91.
    This essay examines a challenge to common literary representations of female mental illness in the Early Modern period—the hysterical woman—in a collection of French short stories contemporary to Vesalius's De Fabrica: Jeanne Flore's Tales and Trials of Love. Jeanne Flore's tales depict several mentally disturbed female protagonists, young women prone to paroxysms of madness and self-mutilation. This study maintains that while Tales and Trials of Love superficially participates in the literary tradition that grew out of those accepted social and medical (...)
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  32.  32
    Medical Men, Women of Letters, and Treatments for Eighteenth-Century Hysteria.Heather Meek - 2013 - Journal of Medical Humanities 34 (1):1-14.
    This paper explores evolving treatments for hysteria in the eighteenth century by examining a selection of works by both physician-writers and educated literary women. The treatments I identify—which range from aggressive bloodlettings, diets, and beatings, to exercise, fresh air, and writing cures—reveal a unique culture of therapy in which female sufferers and doctors exert an influence on one another's notions of what constitutes appropriate management of women's mental illness. A scrutiny of this exchange of ideas suggests that female patients (...)
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  33.  14
    On the "Disappearance" of Hysteria: A Study in the Clinical Deconstruction of a Diagnosis.Mark S. Micale - 1993 - Isis 84 (3):496-526.
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  34.  52
    Early Modern Green Sickness and Pre-Freudian Hysteria.Winfried Schleiner - 2009 - Early Science and Medicine 14 (5):661-676.
    In early modern medicine, both green sickness and hysteria were understood to be gendered diseases, diseases of women. Green sickness, a disease of young women, was considered so serious that John Graunt, the father of English statistics, thought that in his time dozens of women died of it in London every year. One of the symptoms of hysteria was that women fell unconscious. The force of etymology and medical tradition was so strong that in one instance the gender (...)
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  35. "Love Thy Social Media!": Hysteria and the Interpassive Subject.Jack Black - 2022 - CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 24 (4):1--10.
    According to the 2020 docudrama, The Social Dilemma, our very addiction to “social media” has, today, become encapsulated in the tensions between its facilitation as a mode of interpersonal communication and as an insidious conduit for machine learning, surveillance capitalism and manipulation. Amidst a variety of interviewees – many of whom are former employees of social media companies – the documentary finishes on a unanimous conclusion: something must change. By using the docudrama as a pertinent example of our “social media (...)
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  36.  44
    Convulsive Beauty: Images of Hysteria and Transgressive Sexuality: Claude Cahun and Djuna Barnes.Sharla Hutchison - 2003 - Symploke 11 (1):212-226.
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  37.  11
    On the Internet, Hysteria Over Heaven's Gate.George Johnson - unknown
    FOR the techno-libertarians intent on keeping the abstract duchy called cyberspace the freest of all lands, the last few months have been a nightmare of bad vibrations rippling through what the electronic elite derisively calls the "old media.".
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  38.  44
    Hysteria and its Historiography: a Review of Past on Present Writings. [REVIEW]Mark S. Micale - 1989 - History of Science 27 (78):319-351.
  39.  28
    Hysteria and its Historiography: A Review of Past and Present Writings (I). [REVIEW]Mark S. Micale - 1989 - History of Science 27 (3):223-261.
  40. Thrills, orgasms, sadness, and hysteria : Austro-German criticisms of William James.Kevin Mulligan - 2017 - In Alix Cohen & Robert Stern (eds.), Thinking About the Emotions: A Philosophical History. Oxford University Press.
     
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  41.  65
    On Constructing the Disorder of Hysteria.D. B. Allison & M. S. Roberts - 1994 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 19 (3):239-259.
    The concept of hysteria is traced from Hippocrates, where it was thought to be caused by a wandering uterus, through Galen and up to Freud. Throughout the history of medicine from the early Greeks up to the end of the nineteenth century, the definition and diagnosis of hysteria had a function similar to that found in the persecution of witchcraft: it sought to eradicate the outbursts of nonconforming and emotionally threatening conduct of women. At the beginning of the (...)
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  42.  7
    The Knotted Subject: Hysteria and Its Discontents. Elisabeth Bronfen.Dianne Hunter - 2000 - Isis 91 (3):572-573.
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  43.  4
    Psychological Literature: Hysteria, Paramnesia.No Authorship Indicated - 1894 - Psychological Review 1 (1):93-95.
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  44.  20
    Book Review: Hysteria in Women, Ventriloquized Bodies: Narratives of Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century FranceVentriloquized Bodies: Narratives of Hysteria in Nineteenth-century France. BeizerJanet . Pp. xiv + 295. £37.50. [REVIEW]L. S. Jacyna - 1995 - History of Science 33 (3):371-372.
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  45. Perspective: Stigma, Hysteria, and HIV.Wendy E. Parmet - forthcoming - Hastings Center Report.
  46.  41
    Commentary on Connectionist Hysteria.James Phillips & J. Melvin Woody - 1994 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 1 (2):89-90.
  47.  12
    Se-duction is not sex-duction: Desexualizing and de-feminizing hysteria.Milena Mancini, Martina Scudiero, Silvio Mignogna, Valentina Urso & Giovanni Stanghellini - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The psychopathological analysis of hysteria is a victim of narrow conceptualizations. Among these is the inscription of hysteria in the feminine sphere, about body and sexuality, which incentivized conceptual reductionism. Hysteria has been mainly considered a gendered pathology, almost exclusively female, and it has been associated with cultural and/or religious features over time rather than treated as a psychopathological world. Further, hysteria has been dominated by conceptual inaccuracies and indecision, not only in terms of clinical features (...)
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  48.  21
    Metaphor, pathography, and hysteria: recent American writing about illness.Garry Kinnane - 2000 - Critical Review (University of Melbourne) 40:91.
  49.  24
    Ventriloquized Bodies: Narratives of Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century France.Charles Bernheimer & Janet Beizer - 1996 - Substance 25 (1):118.
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  50.  3
    A Historical Overview of Women's Hysteria in Slovenia.Darja Zaviršek - 2000 - European Journal of Women's Studies 7 (2):169-188.
    The article is a discursive analysis of medical, ecclesiastic and lay articles on women's hysteria published in Slovenia between 1877 and 1935. The analysis shows which discourses of women's hysteria dominated across Europe at the turn of the century and how they influenced the construction of the image of female biological and mental inferiority. Special attention is paid to the issue of how far the medical discourse on hysteria helped to justify the gendered division between the public (...)
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