Description |
1 online resource (xxvi, 355 pages) : illustrations (some color) |
Series |
Mental health in historical perspective, 2634-6044 |
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Mental health in historical perspective, 2634-6044
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Contents |
Introduction -- 1. The Beginnings of a British Standard Classification, c. 1845-1860 -- 2. Statistics, Causal Explanations of Insanity and Revisions to the Standard Classification: Medico-Psychological Association Debates c.1860-1882 -- 3. "A Higgledy Piggledy Conglomeration": Prognosis and the "Proto-Kraepelinian" Standard Classification c.1902-1906 -- 4. Heterogeneity and Crisis: The Final Series of Revisions to the Standard Classification c.1928-1932 -- 5. The International Influence of the British Standard Classification During the Interwar Years -- 6. Globalisation, Imperialism and the World Health Organisation's Classification: The End of the "Mesozoic" British Standard Classification: c.1938-1960 |
Summary |
This book provides a detailed examination of the questions that preoccupied British alienists throughout the second half of the nineteenth century. Was insanity one disorder with different forms or a set of distinct natural kinds that each had different causes, symptoms, and outlooks? Was it possible to devise a standardised classification of the insanities that provides a scientific basis to psychological diagnosis? Could statistics on psychological diagnosis provide data to help reveal the nature of insanity? The classification at the centre of these debates, the Medico-Psychological Association's Table of the Forms of Insanity, caused deep divisions that took decades to resolve and hampered efforts to develop asylum medical statistics on psychological diagnosis. The use of the classification in national medical statistics was tantamount to being the standard classification for the asylum. As the appeal of statistics grew within medical circles, the debates intensified, and the divisions grew deeper. Despite lofty aims and years of debate, attempts to develop national statistics on psychological diagnosis had achieved very little by the beginning of the twentieth century. The failure of these efforts, hampered by the unwieldy processes adopted by Lunacy administration, led to the Table of the Forms falling into obscurity after its final set of revisions in 1932. In presenting for the first time the debates surrounding the Table of the Forms of Insanity, this volume calls for a re-evaluation of the history of psychiatric classification through its exploration of the underappreciated links between the standardisation of psychological diagnosis and the development of mental health statistics. By interrogating the links between asylum governance and the clinic, this book presents considerations on classification that still resound today, and provides valuable reading for scholars interested in the social history of medicine, the history of psychiatry, and the history of science. Kevin Matthew Jones is a lecturer in the History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Leeds, UK |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed April 9, 2025) |
Subject |
Medico-psychological Association of Great Britain and Ireland -- History
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Psychodiagnostics -- Great Britain -- History
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Psychiatric hospitals -- Great Britain -- History
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9783031461545 |
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3031461541 |
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