Diagnosing Madness Diagnosing Madness
Studies in Rhetoric / Communication

Diagnosing Madness

The Discursive Construction of the Psychiatric Patient, 1850-1920

    • USD 54.99
    • USD 54.99

Publisher Description

An examination of the evolving rhetoric of psychiatric disease

Diagnosing Madness is a study of the linguistic negotiations at the heart of mental illness identification and patient diagnosis. Through an examination of individual psychiatric case records from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Cristina Hanganu-Bresch and Carol Berkenkotter show how the work of psychiatry was navigated by patients, families, doctors, the general public, and the legal system. The results of examining those involved and their interactions show that the psychiatrist's task became one of constant persuasion, producing arguments surrounding diagnosis and asylum confinement that attempted to reconcile shifting definitions of disease and to respond to sociocultural pressures.

By studying patient cases, the emerging literature of confinement, and patient accounts viewed alongside institutional records, the authors trace the evolving rhetoric of psychiatric disease, its impact on the treatment of patients, its implications for our contemporary understanding of mental illness, and the identity of the psychiatric patient. Diagnosing Madness helps elucidate the larger rhetorical forces that contributed to the eventual decline of the asylum and highlights the struggle for the professionalization of psychiatry.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2019
1 August
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
192
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of South Carolina Press
SELLER
The University of South Carolina
SIZE
7.6
MB
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