Dear Hmadness readers,
History of Psychiatry has just published its June issue (vol. 37.2).
Please find below the list of contributions included in this new issue.
1) Bridging the gap by microscoping the mind: Mental anthropometry, experimental psychopathology, and the scientific ideal of psychiatry at the Eastern Illinois Hospital for the Insane, 1870s–1910s, pp. 107-134. (Catriel Fierro)
2) Malaria therapy for neurosyphilis at Mont Park Hospital for the insane in Australia, 1927–1928, pp. 135-158. (Alison Clayton)
3) Scientific objectivity and social mores: Paternity testing, illegitimacy and misogyny in Constance Pascal’s ‘La Goutte de Sang’ (1935–1936), pp. 159-173. (Felicia Gordon)
4) “The best representative of Russian psychiatry”: Remembering Sergey Korsakov in Russian and Soviet psychiatry, 1900–1954, pp. 174-192. (Mikhail Pogorelov)
5) Reform of care for people with mental illness in two German states before reunification: An oral history approach, pp. 193-210. (Georg Bornemann, Thomas Becker, Robert Feustel, Heiner Fangerau, Felicitas Söhner and Sven Speerforck)
6) The clinical, philosophical, and political insights of James Frame (1803–1876), or the exemplary singularity of the common, pp. 211-221. (Nicolas J. Schwalbe)
7) The Amsterdam Suggestive Psychotherapy Clinic, 222-238. (Stephen Wilson)