Keyword [psychiatry] Result: 1 - 20 | Page: 1 of 2 |
1. | Huntering After The Human's Soul |
2. | Blanche Must Be Mad: A Re-reading Of Blanche's Madness In A Streetcar Named Desire |
3. | The Evolution Of Consciousness And Psychotherapy |
4. | The Power Behind Separation In Mrs. Dalloway |
5. | The Empire Writes Back In Medical Imagination |
6. | A Report On The Translation Of How To Heal Depression(Section One To Section Fifty One) |
7. | A Report On E-C Translation Of The Mind Of The Child(Part ?) |
8. | A Report On English-Chinese Translation Of Mind,Modernity,Madness (Chapter 7) |
9. | Mad narratives: Exploring self-constitutions through the diagnostic looking glass |
10. | Thinking differently: Psychiatry, literature and dissent in the late Soviet period |
11. | The cultural construction of war and mental trouble: World War I veterans, masculinity and psychiatry at St. Elizabeth's Hospital |
12. | Whatever happened to the psyche?: A sociological examination of science, religion and spirituality in psychology and psychiatry |
13. | Who are we to become if we are not this: Madness, anti-psychiatry and literature |
14. | Hysteria on the Borderline: Psychiatry, Cultural Change, and Subjective Experience Among Women in Morocco |
15. | O outro lado: Candomble, psychiatry and discourse in Bahia, Brazil |
16. | Children's Mental Health in the United States: The Development of Child Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins, 1890--1945 |
17. | 'Squiggles in the dust': An implicit theory of symbolization in Winnicott's 'Therapeutic Consultations in Child Psychiatry' |
18. | The Peculiar Institution: Gender, Race and Religion in the Making of Modern Psychiatry, 1842--1932 |
19. | Medicating the Eschatological Body: Psychiatric Technology for Christian Wayfarers |
20. | The neurosis of narrative: American literature and psychoanalytic psychiatry during World War II |
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