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From lesion to metaphor : chronic pain in British, French and German medical writings, 1800-1914 / Andrew Hodgkiss.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hodgkiss, Andrew, author.
Series:
Clio medica (Amsterdam, Netherlands) ; 58.
Clio Medica ; 58
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Pain--History--19th century.
Pain.
Analgesia.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (iii, 218 pages)
Place of Publication:
Brill | Rodopi 2000
Amsterdam, Netherlands ; Atlanta, Georgia : Rodopi, 2000.
Summary:
Most non-malignant chronic pain is medically unexplained. But that has not stopped doctors from trying. These improvisations at the limit of medical knowledge offer a way into the history of neurosis. Lesionless pain was a paradigmatic problem of clinical method after 1800. It was central to the emergence of neuralgia, spinal irritation, surgical hysteria, railway spine and hysterical conversion. Evidence of a nineteenth-century tradition of theoretical discussion about the relationship between chronic pain and pathological lesion, trauma, mood, memory and personality is brought together here for the first time. A wide range of medical texts is surveyed, including pathology, surgery, physiology, neurology, psychiatry and psychoanalysis. We see the medical gaze first penetrate the tissues of the body then extend to examine the language and mental state of the pain patient. This history of chronic pain should be of interest to medical historians, pain clinicians, liaison psychiatrists, clinical psychologists and psychotherapists.
Contents:
Introduction
Secondary Literature Review and Methodological Remarks.
The Birth of a Problem
A Local Irritation: Pain Without Lesion in the writings of French and British Physicians and Surgeons: 1820 – 1840
Gemeingefühl: German Romanticism, Cenesthesis and Subjective Pain: 1794–1846
Reflexion and Depression: Pain Without Lesion in mid-century German and British ‘Neurological’ and ‘Psychiatric’ Writings: 1840–55
Functional Nervous Disorders in French and British Medical Texts: 1859–1871
Functional Nervous Disorders in French and British Medical Writings: 1866–1886
Psychalgia and Conversion: Pain Without Lesion in late nineteenth-century Psychiatric and Psychoanalytic Writings: 1872–1895
Pain as Psychopathology in early twentieth-century French and German Psychiatric Writings: 1900–1914
Conclusions
Bibliography.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
90-04-33332-0
OCLC:
45127303
Publisher Number:
10.1163/9789004333321 DOI

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