Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 “We Are Veritable Animals”: The Nineteenth-Century Paris Menagerie as a Site for the Science of Intelligence
- 2 “Physiological Surgery”: Laboratory Science as the Epistemic Basis of Modern Surgery (and Neurosurgery)
- 3 Configuring Epidemic Encephalitis as a National and International Neurological Concern
- 4 Circuits, Algae, and Whipped Cream: The Biophysics of Nerve, ca. 1930
- 5 Epilepsy and the Laboratory Technician: Technique in Histology and Fiction
- 6 “What Was in Their Luggage?”: German Refugee Neuroscientists, Migrating Technologies, and the Emergence of Interdisciplinary Research Networks in North America, 1933 to 1963
- 7 Dualist Techniques for Materialist Imaginaries: Matter and Mind in the 1951 Festival of Britain
- 8 A “Model Schizophrenia”: Amphetamine Psychosis and the Transformation of American Psychiatry
- 9 Salvation through Reductionism: The National Institute of Mental Health and the Return to Biological Psychiatry
- Coda: Technique, Marginality, and History
- Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 “We Are Veritable Animals”: The Nineteenth-Century Paris Menagerie as a Site for the Science of Intelligence
- 2 “Physiological Surgery”: Laboratory Science as the Epistemic Basis of Modern Surgery (and Neurosurgery)
- 3 Configuring Epidemic Encephalitis as a National and International Neurological Concern
- 4 Circuits, Algae, and Whipped Cream: The Biophysics of Nerve, ca. 1930
- 5 Epilepsy and the Laboratory Technician: Technique in Histology and Fiction
- 6 “What Was in Their Luggage?”: German Refugee Neuroscientists, Migrating Technologies, and the Emergence of Interdisciplinary Research Networks in North America, 1933 to 1963
- 7 Dualist Techniques for Materialist Imaginaries: Matter and Mind in the 1951 Festival of Britain
- 8 A “Model Schizophrenia”: Amphetamine Psychosis and the Transformation of American Psychiatry
- 9 Salvation through Reductionism: The National Institute of Mental Health and the Return to Biological Psychiatry
- Coda: Technique, Marginality, and History
- Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index
Summary
The essays in this volume visit episodes in the history of the mind and brain sciences through the historical looking glass of the broader concepts of technique, technology, and therapy. In the last three decades, technique and technology in particular have commanded increasing attention from scholars working on the history of science and medicine, but they have been less explored by historians of neuroscience. Even therapy, which at first glance seems to have been widely discussed by scholars, has been explored only selectively; more marginal neurological therapies, for instance, have only recently captured historians’ attention. In putting together this volume, our first goal was to draw together more closely a community of scholars who study diverse topics pertaining to the history of the mind and brain sciences but who are also concerned about broader historiographical directions and who rely on similar conceptual styles. This volume was conceived as a meditation on the role that technique, technology, and therapy—as conceptual and rhetorical categories, as well as practical embodiments—have played in the constitution of the mind and brain sciences over the past one and a half centuries. Our second goal was to collect a series of papers able to provide a sophisticated and versatile teaching tool for graduate and senior undergraduate seminars.
Collectively, the papers contribute to and challenge some aspects of the current historiography of the neurosciences, which has broadly developed in a way that encourages constructing and thinking within grand narratives about progress in the studies of the mind and brain, and which tends to overemphasize the centrality of the human self within this history. In contrast, this volume makes a collective case for exploring the field through the lens of seemingly marginal stories—stories that appear, from a contemporary perspective—to be situated at the edges of history. By foregrounding these marginal stories, we hope to disrupt the standard narrative and to offer a competing view of the history of the mind and brain sciences. In place of a grand narrative, our volume offers a series of unconventional stories. In lieu of a linear history of progress, we suggest a congregation of fractured histories.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The History of the Brain and Mind SciencesTechnique, Technology, Therapy, pp. 1 - 24Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2017