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R.D. Laing and Psychodynamic Psychiatry in 1950s Glasgow: A Reappraisal
Contributor(s): Hunter-Brown, Isobel (Author), Hinshelwood, R. D. (Foreword by)
ISBN: 1853439746     ISBN-13: 9781853439742
Publisher: Free Association Books
OUR PRICE:   $34.60  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: May 2008
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Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: Author Isobel Hunter-Brown, who worked alongside R.D. Laing in Glasgow, seeks to set the record straight. From the contemporary perspective, Laing is admired both as a pioneer of ideas and as a charismatic and prominent anti-psychiatrist. Hunter-Brown reveals, however, that Laing's view of sanity and insanity as a continuum and his opposition to high-dosage, anti-psychotic medication already formed part of the Scottish psychiatric tradition. Hunter-Brown argues that the culture of the Glasgow units in which Laing worked early in his career had already been strongly influenced by the Scottish psychoanalyst Fairbairn. Furthermore, for decades prior to this, their inspiration had traditionally been drawn from Adolph Meyer, who promoted a holistic view of his patients, exploring biological, psychological, and social dimensions as part of their diagnosis, an approach that is widely believed to have originated with Laing. Psychiatrists seldom write about their profession, but this author des
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Medical | Psychiatry - General
- Medical | History
Dewey: 616.890
LCCN: 2008276548
Physical Information: 243 pages
 
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Publisher Description:
Author Isobel Hunter-Brown, who worked alongside R.D. Laing in Glasgow, seeks to set the record straight. From the contemporary perspective, Laing is admired both as a pioneer of ideas and as a charismatic and prominent anti-psychiatrist. Hunter-Brown reveals, however, that Laing's view of sanity and insanity as a continuum and his opposition to high-dosage, anti-psychotic medication already formed part of the Scottish psychiatric tradition. Hunter-Brown argues that the culture of the Glasgow units in which Laing worked early in his career had already been strongly influenced by the Scottish psychoanalyst Fairbairn. Furthermore, for decades prior to this, their inspiration had traditionally been drawn from Adolph Meyer, who promoted a holistic view of his patients, exploring biological, psychological, and social dimensions as part of their diagnosis, an approach that is widely believed to have originated with Laing. Psychiatrists seldom write about their profession, but this author describes the inner workings of psychiatric practice in Glasgow during the 1950s and the way in which some practitioners in that allegedly barbarous era were already using psychodynamic methods to help their patients.