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1 Voices in the History of Madness: An Introduction to Personal and Professional Perspectives |
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1 | (22) |
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Part I Shifting Perspectives in the Industry of Madness |
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4 | (4) |
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Part II Reconstructing Patient Perspectives |
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8 | (3) |
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Part III The Visual and the Material |
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11 | (2) |
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Part IV Mad Studies and Activism |
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13 | (10) |
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Part I Shifting Perspectives in the Industry of Madness |
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23 | (92) |
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2 Accepted and Rejected: Late Nineteenth-Century Application for Admission to the Scottish National Institution for the Education of Imbecile Children |
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25 | (24) |
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Early Ethos and Evolution |
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27 | (4) |
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Selected and Rejected: Outcomes |
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31 | (7) |
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Beyond the Gates of the SNI |
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38 | (4) |
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42 | (7) |
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3 Mental Health in the Vernacular: Print and Counter-Hegemonic Approaches to Madness in Colonial Bengal |
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49 | (22) |
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Prelude: Epistemic Challenges in the Concept of Psyche in Modern South Asia |
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49 | (2) |
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The Concept of Madness in Premodern South Asia |
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51 | (1) |
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The World of Print in Colonial Bengal |
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52 | (2) |
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Medical Books in the Vernacular |
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54 | (1) |
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Mental Health in Vernacular Health Periodicals |
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55 | (9) |
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64 | (7) |
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4 "The Root of All Evil is Inactivity": The Response of French Psychiatrists to New Approaches to Patient Work and Occupation, 1918-1939 |
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71 | (24) |
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71 | (2) |
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73 | (1) |
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Patient Work "before 1918 |
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73 | (2) |
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The Aftermath of World War I |
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75 | (1) |
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Criticisms of Patient Work |
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75 | (3) |
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"More Active Therapy"--A New Theory Regarding Patient Occupation |
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78 | (3) |
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The Effect of the New Theory on Practice in Asylums |
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81 | (1) |
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Impediments to the Adoption of More Active Therapy |
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82 | (6) |
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88 | (7) |
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5 Distant Voices: Treatment of Mentally Ill Children at the Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark, c. 1935-1976 |
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95 | (20) |
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95 | (4) |
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99 | (2) |
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101 | (3) |
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Diagnostic Tools and Treatment |
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104 | (3) |
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107 | (3) |
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110 | (5) |
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Part II Reconstructing Patient Perspectives |
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115 | (102) |
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6 Experiences of the Madhouse in England, 1650-1810 |
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117 | (20) |
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119 | (4) |
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123 | (4) |
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Perceptions of the Proprietor |
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127 | (3) |
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130 | (7) |
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7 "Tells his Story Quite Rationally and Collectedly": Examining the Casebooks of the Grahamstown Lunatic Asylum, 1890-1910, for Cases of Delusion Where Patients Voiced their Life Stories |
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137 | (18) |
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The Life Stories and Testimonies of Sanity Given by the Patients |
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139 | (4) |
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Cross-examination of a Patient's Personal Account of Restored Sanity |
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143 | (3) |
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Personal Accounts of Institutionalisation |
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146 | (3) |
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149 | (6) |
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8 Dehumanizing Experience, Rehumanizing Self-Awareness: Perception of Violence in Psychiatric Hospitals of Soviet Lithuania |
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155 | (18) |
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Patient View and Medical Gaze |
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158 | (3) |
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The Hidden Power of Medical Discourse: The Externalization of the Self |
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161 | (3) |
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In Alignment with Medical Discourse: Violence as a Result of Disorder |
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164 | (2) |
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Shelter of Medical Discourse: Violence as an Enforcement of Madness |
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166 | (2) |
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168 | (5) |
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9 "I Like My Job because It Will Get Me Out Quicker": Work, Independence, and Disability at Indiana's Central State Hospital (1986-1993) |
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173 | (18) |
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175 | (1) |
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176 | (2) |
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178 | (1) |
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Results: Patient Goals and Experiences of Work |
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179 | (3) |
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Staff Goals and Policy Changes During the Closure |
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182 | (9) |
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10 "More than Bricks and Mortar": Meaningful Care Practices in the Old State Mental Hospitals |
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191 | (26) |
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191 | (1) |
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192 | (2) |
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194 | (2) |
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Contested Meanings of Institutional Care |
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196 | (1) |
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Community Psychiatry at the Nottingham Mental Hospitals |
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197 | (3) |
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Fragmentation of Services in Community |
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200 | (4) |
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Experiencing Neglect in Community |
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204 | (2) |
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206 | (2) |
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208 | (9) |
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Part III The Visual and the Material |
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217 | (68) |
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11 Tracking Traces of the Art Extraordinary Collection |
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219 | (18) |
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Archives, Voices and Traces |
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223 | (2) |
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Gym Hall, Barlinnie Prison |
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225 | (4) |
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An Unmarked Grave, Sleepyhillock Cemetery |
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229 | (3) |
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232 | (5) |
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12 Patient Photographs, Patient Voices: Recovering Patient Experience in the Nineteenth-Century Asylum |
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237 | (26) |
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237 | (2) |
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The `Voice' of a Photograph |
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239 | (4) |
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A Picture Tells a Thousand Words? |
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243 | (10) |
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253 | (5) |
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258 | (5) |
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13 A Boundary Between Two Worlds? Community Perceptions of Former Asylums in Lancashire, England |
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263 | (22) |
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263 | (1) |
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An Image of Fear and Isolation |
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264 | (1) |
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265 | (1) |
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Lancaster Moor and Whittingham Hospitals: A Brief History |
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266 | (1) |
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267 | (5) |
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Former Asylums as Heritage |
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272 | (3) |
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275 | (10) |
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Part IV Mad Studies and Activism |
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285 | (128) |
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14 Brutal Sanity and Mad Compassion: Tracing the Voice of Dorothea Buck |
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287 | (20) |
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On Voice and the Obstacles to Voicing Madness |
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287 | (2) |
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Historiography and Framing the Study of the Voice of the Mad |
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289 | (1) |
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290 | (3) |
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Towards a Genealogy of Dorothea's Voice |
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293 | (1) |
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Past and Present Intertwined: Researching Literature and Searching for Allies |
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293 | (2) |
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295 | (2) |
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Voice and Emotional Labour: Dealing with the Challenge of Power Structures |
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297 | (2) |
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Framing in Terms of Contradictions and Paradoxes: Her Memoirs |
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299 | (1) |
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300 | (1) |
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In Conclusion: Emergence of a New Expertise |
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301 | (6) |
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15 Mad Activists and the Left in Ontario, 1970s to 2000 |
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307 | (26) |
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Introduction: Mad Activists, Identity Politics and the Left |
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307 | (5) |
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Deinstitutionalization in Canada |
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312 | (1) |
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Disability and Mad Movement Activists in Ontario |
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313 | (3) |
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Race, Gender, Sexual Orientation and Ontario's Mad Movement |
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316 | (3) |
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Class, Unions and Mad People's Civil Rights |
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319 | (6) |
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325 | (8) |
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16 Knowing Our Own Minds: Transforming the Knowledge Base of Madness and Distress |
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333 | (26) |
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Finding Our Voices: A Brief History |
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334 | (3) |
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Letting Stories Breathe: The Power of Personal Narratives |
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337 | (1) |
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338 | (3) |
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341 | (2) |
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The Role of Survivor Research |
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343 | (2) |
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345 | (4) |
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349 | (1) |
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350 | (1) |
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351 | (8) |
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17 Making Public Their Use of History: Reflections on the History of Collective Action by Psychiatric Patients, the Oor Mad History Project and Survivors History Group |
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359 | (24) |
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359 | (3) |
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The Disappearance of Patient Views and Voices in the History of Medicine |
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362 | (3) |
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A Twentieth-Century Turning Point: From Formal Systems and Functionalist Grids to the Insurrection of Subjugated Knowledges |
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365 | (4) |
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A `Question of Levels': Doing History from A Level Below Which You Cannot Sink' |
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369 | (3) |
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Conclusion: Making Public Use of History Requires Embracing That Sinking Feeling of Difficulty and Conflict |
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372 | (5) |
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377 | (6) |
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18 Often, When I Am Using My Voice It Does Not Go Well: Perspectives on the Service User Experience |
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383 | (20) |
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383 | (1) |
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The Social and Political Background to Contemporary Models of Mental Health Care |
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384 | (6) |
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390 | (1) |
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Is Social Media the Future for Youth Mental Health Support? |
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391 | (1) |
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Mitigating the Risks of Social Media |
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392 | (1) |
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The Voice of Lived Experience |
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393 | (4) |
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397 | (6) |
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19 Coda: Speaking Madness: Word, Image, Action |
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403 | (10) |
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406 | (2) |
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408 | (5) |
Name Index |
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413 | (8) |
Place Index |
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421 | (4) |
Subject Index |
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425 | |