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h-madness

This blog follows the history of psychiatry

Tag: Ottoman Empire

Article: Psychiatry, Space, and Time: Case of an Ottoman Asylum, by Burçak Özlüdil

Posted on January 21, 2019January 17, 2019 by Katariina Parhi

“Psychiatry, Space, and Time: Case of an Ottoman Asylum.” Journal of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association, 5:1 (Spring 2018):… Read more Article: Psychiatry, Space, and Time: Case of an Ottoman Asylum, by Burçak Özlüdil

Dissertations – Madness and Empire: The Ottoman Asylum, 1830-1930

Posted on December 15, 2017December 18, 2017 by marinalienhard

Photo: Female mental patients in the Istanbul Toptasi Asylum. Date of the photograph unknown, possibly 1910s. Source: Mazhar Osman, Sıhhat… Read more Dissertations – Madness and Empire: The Ottoman Asylum, 1830-1930

Dissertations – The Ottoman State and the insane, 1856–1908

Posted on January 5, 2015 by marinalienhard

Cihangir Gündoğdu: “Are there no asylums?”
 : the Ottoman State and the insane, 1856–1908 The present study seeks to contribute… Read more Dissertations – The Ottoman State and the insane, 1856–1908

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