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Madness: A Brief History

Madness: A Brief History
By Roy Porter

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Product Description

This story of madness reveals the radically different perceptions of madness and approaches to its treatment, from antiquity to the beginning of the 21st century. Roy Porter explores what we really mean by "madness", covering an enormous range of topics from witches to creative geniuses, electric shock therapy to sexual deviancy, and psychoanalysis to Prozac. The origins of debates about how we define and deal with insanity are examined through eyewitness accounts of those treating patients, writers, artists, and the mad themselves.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #391168 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-03-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 258 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Roy Porter's untimely death deprived us of one of the outstanding scholars of his generation. This short book on how mental illness has been defined and treated through the ages is brilliantly done. It's concise but not reductive; readable but not dumbed down. Porter wears his vast interdisciplinary learning lightly, and has the knack of combining elegantly clear summary with vivid and intriguing detail - from witchcraft to Freud; from Bedlam to psychopharmacology and beyond. And Porter is also highly informative whilst whetting the reader's appetite for more. In this way the book functions as an ideal (and handsomely produced) introduction to its subject; and as a compelling gateway onto its author's more than 80 other books.

Literary Review
...succinct and well-illustrated... a handy manual for those who are in search of a quick reminder of the evolving history of madness

New Statesman
useful and readable mini-history


Customer Reviews

a brave attempt at a massive, contraversial subject3
Perhaps nobody but the late great Roy Porter (our greatest medical historian as the British Medical Journal's obituary put it) could have attempted to summarise the history of madness in 241 pages. Certainly nobody could have made such a good, if ultimately somewhat flawed, attempt.

Starting with what is good - Roy Porter gives us an excellent overview and summary of the whole history of madness moving from earliest times through to the Prozac present. His writing is crisp and extremely readable throughout and he is generally fair and unbiased. He wisely sidesteps a definition of madness and gets on with telling the story. Porter discusses wider social and cultural issues alongside the personalities and principles, tackling Michel Focault with exceptional verve and perception. He is excellent on the dichotomies and controversies and debates - external v internal causes of madness, psychiatry v anti-psychiatry, psychology v neurology, Freud v Jung, organic v functional disease, psychotherapy v medication, the role and reason for asylums. The coverage of early modern Europe, including the philosophical contributions of Locke and Descartes, the rationalisation of madness as a part of the Enlightenment project and the slow rise of humane attitudes to the mentally ill, with attempts to care and cure in early industrial societies are all exceptional. Finally, Roy Porter gives a chapter to the voices of the mad/"mad" themselves, fascinating case vigenettes which he resists the temptation to diagnose.

But this vast scope of coverage comes at a price. Some issues, especially in the history of 20th century psychiatry (which chapter is just too short and compressed) are grossly over-simplified . The discussion of drugs for mental illness which have revolutionised psychiatry and relieved so much human suffering and misery gets just over a page. While the discussion of Freud and psychoanalysis is excellent, some of the less well-known but equally important pioneers of the 19th century get little space and less analysis. No mention is made of the incredible recent advances in neurosciences, brain imaging, genetics and epidemiology which are revealing much about the causes of mental illness. It is too easy to poke fun at the changing psychiatric landscape with its "new" diagnoses, epitomised by the DSM-IV manual, but the recognition of entities such as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder has been as much cultural, social and political as medical. Apart from some mention of early Islamic approaches to madness and a passing mention of Japan there is nothing about non-Western psychiatry (although Porter does tell us the madness is found in all cultures and societies). And perhaps most glaring of all, not a word about the appalling abuse of psychiatry, for political purposes, in the former Soviet Union.

But despite these reservations, this is still an attractive and well-presented introduction to the subject, there seems no equivalent brief study, and frankly the issues Roy Porter skates over have had whole libraries written about them. As ever Porter provides an excellent and thorough bibliography where those whose appetite is whetted can explore the topics to their heart's (or should it be mind's (or should it be brain's)) delight.

A very nice little summary book.5
This book, being both small in size and big in words, outstripped my expectations of it. Using clear and unambiguous language, avoiding jargon that usually only serves to alienate folks and just make them feel as if they are the dim ones, the author has summarised and yet fully explained the history of where we are at in psychiatry to date - from chaining folk up to the walls and bleeding them of bad humours, to treating people as people first and unwell second. Highly recommended, and not just for those in the field.

Condensed complexity3
This was a brave attempt, which almost succeeded. Prof. Porter has written a short, lucid account of a problematic, complicated subject. This is to be commended. Unfortunately, neither the brevity nor the structure of this book does justice to its scope and potential. The chapter headings each cover an aspect of madness over history; thus we are given a brief overview of attitudes to the mad, the diagnosis of insanity, views of its causes and cures, etc, from Mesopotamia through Hippocrates and Galen, with a glance at the middle ages, to the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, Romantics and the Victorians, finally winding up in the 20th century, with Freud and psychoanalytical theories. As a Classicist, with knowledge of the history of Greek medicine, I was able to judge the quality of his comments on the Greeks, which sometimes seemed simplified to the point of distortion. However, the book is freshly written and always interesting. I particularly enjoyed his assessment of the social history of madness (in which he takes Foucault to task wonderfully). He never lapses into jargon,and difficulties are always explained with clarity. One can't help but wondering, however, why OUP decided on this small (if beautifuly produced) format for an author whose long history of medicine was such a great success.