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How everyone became depressed : the rise and fall of the nervous breakdown  Cover Image Book Book

How everyone became depressed : the rise and fall of the nervous breakdown

Shorter, Edward (author.).

Summary: In How Everyone Became Depressed, Edward Shorter, a distinguished professor of psychiatry and the history of medicine argues for a return to the old fashioned concept of nervous illness. These are, he writes, diseases of the entire body, not the mind, and as was recognized as early as the 1600s. Shorter traces the evolution of the concept of "nerves" and the "nervous breakdown" in western medical thought. He points to a great paradigm shift in the first third of the twentieth century, driven especially by Freud, that transferred behavioral disorders from neurology to psychiatry, spotlighting the mind, not the body. The catch-all term "depression" now applies to virtually everything, "a jumble of non-disease entities, created by political infighting within psychiatry, by competitive struggles in the pharmaceutical industry, and by the whimsy of the regulators." Depression is a real and very serious illness, he argues; it should not be diagnosed so promiscuously, and certainly not without regard to the rest of the body. Meloncholia, he writes, "the quintessence of the nervous breakdown, reaches deep into the endocrine system, which governs the thyroid and adrenal glands among other organs." In a learned yet provocative challenge to psychiatry, Shorter argues that the continuing misuse of "depression" represents nothing less than "the failure of the scientific imagination. -- Review from Reviews & More

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780199948086 (alk. paper)
  • ISBN: 0199948089 (alk. paper)
  • Physical Description: print
    x, 256 pages ; 25 cm.
  • Publisher: Oxford : Oxford University Press, [2013]

Content descriptions

General Note:
CatMonthString:june.13
Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages [201]-241) and index.
Formatted Contents Note: 1. Introduction -- 2. Nerves as a problem -- 3. The rise of nervous illness -- 4. Fatigue -- 5. Anxiety -- 6. A different kind of nervous breakdown--melancholia -- 7. The nervous breakdown -- 8. Paradigm shift -- 9. Something wrong with the label -- 10. Drugs -- 11. The return of the two depressions (and an anxious postscript) -- 12. Nerves redux -- 13. Context.
Subject: Affective Symptoms
Depression, Mental
Stress, Physcological
Affective disorders
Stress (Psychology)

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Camosun College Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Circulation Modifier Holdable? Status Due Date Courses
Interurban Library RC 537 S5245 2013 (Text) 26040002995096 Main Collection Volume hold Available -

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