Cart
Free Shipping in Australia
Proud to be B-Corp

Mania David Healy (University of Wales College of Medicine)

Mania By David Healy (University of Wales College of Medicine)

Summary

Drawing heavily on primary sources and supplemented with interviews and insight gained over Healy's long career, this lucid and engaging overview of mania sheds new light on one of humankind's most vexing ailments.

Mania Summary

Mania: A Short History of Bipolar Disorder by David Healy (University of Wales College of Medicine)

This provocative history of bipolar disorder illuminates how perceptions of illness, if not the illnesses themselves, are mutable over time. Beginning with the origins of the concept of mania-and the term maniac-in ancient Greek and Roman civilizations, renowned psychiatrist David Healy examines how concepts of mental afflictions evolved as scientific breakthroughs established connections between brain function and mental illness. Healy recounts the changing definitions of mania through the centuries, explores the effects of new terminology and growing public awareness of the disease on culture and society, and examines the rise of psychotropic treatments and pharmacological marketing over the past four decades. Along the way, Healy clears much of the confusion surrounding bipolar disorder even as he raises crucial questions about how, why, and by whom the disease is diagnosed. Drawing heavily on primary sources and supplemented with interviews and insight gained over Healy's long career, this lucid and engaging overview of mania sheds new light on one of humankind's most vexing ailments.

Mania Reviews

If David Healy's intent is to present a cohesive, thorough, integrated and provocative account of the history of the concept of mania and the evolution of what is currently called bipolar disorder, he is tremendously successful. PsycCRITIQUES 2009 Healy reminds us that we need to ask ourselves what it means to be ill and what it means to be well. -- Garan Holcombe California Literary Review 2008 A learned and polemical volume in the series Biographies of Disease published by the Johns Hopkins University Press... Healy is an intellectual bomb-thrower, a most erudite and clever doctor with an anarchic streak that he cannot quite reconcile with disinterested historical inquiry. He is interesting precisely for the subtle detonations that he sets off in the reader's mind, rattling the received ideas too comfortably ensconced there. -- Algis Valiunas New Atlantis 2009 A powerful political tract. As social history it provides the most detailed available account of the interactions of psychiatry and the world of pharmaceutical manufacturing. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 2009 Provides a probing and challenging commentary on the state of contemporary psychiatry. -- Allan Beveridge British Journal of Psychiatry 2009 David Healy is indeed an enfant terrible-and a very brave man. I doubt he is on Eli Lilly's or Pfizer's Christmas card list. Times Literary Supplement Mania is a work that deserves a wide readership. -- Gerald N. Grob, Ph.D. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Well-written and compelling... I encourage you to read this exceptional book. -- Tom Olson, PhD Nursing History Review 2010 The book is a scholarly one [and] Healy's wide knowledge of the facts of the history is impressive. -- Paul Skerritt Health and History 2009 [Healy's] work has enriched our historiographic discourse enormously and social historians of medicine can only greet that as good news. -- Eric J. Engstrom Social History of Medicine 2009 How did we come to apply such a serious diagnosis to vaguely depressed or irritable adults, to unruly children and to nursing home residents? Is it simply that psychiatric science has progressed and now allows us to detect more easily an illness that had previously been ignored or misunderstood? Healy has another, more cynical explanation: the never-ending expansion of the category of bipolar disorder benefits large pharmaceutical companies eager to sell medications marketed with the disorder in mind. -- Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen London Review of Books 2010

About David Healy (University of Wales College of Medicine)

David Healy is a professor of psychiatry and the director of the North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine at Cardiff University. He is the author of several books on the history of psychopharmaceuticals, including Let Them Eat Prozac, The Antidepressant Era, and The Creation of Psychopharmacology.

Table of Contents

Foreword, by Charles E. Rosenberg
Preface: Stories about Mania
Acknowledgments
1. Frenzy and Stupor
2. Circling the Brain
3. Circular Madness
4. The Stone of Madness
5. The Eclipse of Manic-Depressive Disorder
6. Branded in the USA
7. The Latest Mania
8. The Engineers of Human Souls
Coda: The Once and Future Laboratory
Notes
Index

Additional information

GOR004893299
9781421403977
1421403978
Mania: A Short History of Bipolar Disorder by David Healy (University of Wales College of Medicine)
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Johns Hopkins University Press
2011-11-26
320
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Mania