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103
   
The HAM-D
: Hamilton, “A Rating Scale for Depression.”

 

106
   
“This Be the Verse”
: Larkin,
High Windows
, 30.

 

110
   
Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Requiem”
: Stevenson, “Requiem,”
http://www.poetry-archive.com/s/requiem.html
.

 

110
   
“Life is either mostly adventure”
: Elkin,
The MacGuffin,
233.

 

111
   
the change in human character
: Woolf, “Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown,” 194.

 

111
   
Mourning, with its “painful mood”
: Freud, “Mourning and Melancholia,” 204.

 

111
   
“consider interfering with it”
: Ibid.

 

112
   
Not so with melancholia
: By
melancholia
Freud has in mind something similar to what Kraepelin at first kept in and then removed from his
Lehrbuch
: a state characterized by despondency, fear, delusions, and hypochondria and without obvious connection to the circumstances of a patient’s life. But Freud wasn’t following Kraepelin’s nosology here; indeed, he considered Kraepelin a professional enemy. Instead, he was drawing on a common understanding of melancholia as the condition first described by Hippocrates.

 

112
   
“In mourning”
: Ibid., 205–6.

 

112
   
It would be fruitless
: Ibid., 206.

 

113
   
“related to the child’s”
: Freud,
Beyond the Pleasure Principle,
9.

 

113
   
“carried along with it”
: Ibid., 9–10.

 

114
   
Whatever insult set off
: Ibid., 211.

 

114
   
Patients manage to avenge themselves
: Ibid.

 

114
   
“Prince Hamlet has ready”
: Freud, “Mourning and Melancholia,” 206.

 

115
   
“The loss of the love-object”
: Ibid., 210.

 

115
   
Karl Popper
: Popper,
The Poverty of Historicism,
131–35.

 

116
   
learned helplessness
: Seligman, “Learned Helplessness in the Rat.”

 

116
   
a series of studies
: Alloy and Abramson, “Judgment of Contingency in Depressed and Nondepressed Students.”

 

117
   
“depressed people are ‘sadder but wiser’”
: Ibid., 479–80.

 

117
   
a “crucial question”
: Ibid., 480.

 

118
   
“brought our instincts”
: Freud, “Transience,” 199.

 

118
   
Shell shock
: Zaretsky,
Secrets of the Soul,
121–26.

 

119
   
“What lives, wants to die again”
: Quoted in Gay,
Freud
, 395.

 

119
   
Todestrieb
(“death instinct”)
: Gay,
Freud,
391–92; Freud,
Civilization and Its Discontents,
68–69.

 

119
   
Once mourning is overcome
: Freud, “Transience,” 200.

 

119
   
“far more a matter”
: Gay,
Freud,
553.

 

119
   
The fateful question
: Freud,
Civilization and Its Discontents,
81–82.

 

120
   
“The life imposed on us”
: Ibid., 13.

 

120
   
“the threat of external unhappiness”
: Ibid., 64.

 

122
   
“psychology for winners”
: Kovel,
The Age of Desire,
267.

 

122
   
“Freudianism helped construct”
: Zaretsky,
Secrets of the Soul
, 142–43.

 

122
   
“life in America”
: New York Times
, “Warns of Danger in American Life,” June 5, 1927.

 

123
   
“I believe that I have not given”
: Freud,
Civilization and Its Discontents
, 81.

 

123
   
“My pessimism appears”
: Gay,
Freud
, 552–53.

 

124
   
“declared that his health”
: New York Times,
“American Loses Suit Against Freud,” May 25, 1927.

 

125
   
“It burdens [a doctor]”
: Freud,
Question of Lay Analysis,
95.

 

125
   
“suggest somatic rather than psychogenic affections”
: Freud, “Mourning and Melancholia,” 203.

 

125
   
“include elements from the mental sciences”
: Freud,
Question of Lay Analysis
, 88.

 

125
   
“self knowledge,” he wrote
: Ibid., 90.

 

125
   
“specialized branch of medicine”
: Ibid., 91.

 

125
   
“As long as I live”
: Gay,
Freud
, 491.

 

125
   
“an attempt at repression”
: Freud,
Question of Lay Analysis
, 96.

 

126
   
“expect nervous disorders”
: Ibid., 5.

 

CHAPTER 7

 

Page

133
   
“Come on, you motherfuckers”
: Rosenhan, “On Being Sane,” 256.

 

133
   
“the bereaved widow”
: Dufresne,
Against Freud,
13.

 

134
   
“literary and scientific hero”
: Wortis,
Fragments of an Analysis with Freud,
1.

 

134
   
“very unusually talented”
: Ibid., 3.

 

134
   
“I had no wish”
: Ibid.

 

134
   
“the views of the widow”
: Dufresne,
Against Freud
, 15.

 

134
   
“Though I am myself skeptical”
: Wortis,
Fragments
, 5.

 

135
   
“He [Freud] would have thrown me out”
: Dufresne,
Against Freud
, 16.

 

135
   
“I was taunting Freud”
: Ibid., 11.

 

135
   
“It is true you have no palpable symptoms”
: Wortis,
Fragments
, 154.

 

135
   
“You know shit about psychoanalysis”
: Dufresne,
Against Freud
, 13.

 

135
   
“He seemed to be a bit hard of hearing”
: Wortis,
Fragments
, 24.

 

135
   
“Dreaming is nothing but”
: Wortis,
Fragments
, 88.

 

135
   
“No man could tell the truth”
: Ibid., 121.

 

136
   
“You have not yet completed”
: Ibid., 61.

 

136
   
“A person who professes to believe”
: Ibid., 44.

 

136
   
“I feel sure”
: Ibid., 154.

 

136
   
The
New York Times
was satisfied: New York Times,
“Dr. Sakel Is Dead; Psychiatrist, 57,” December 3, 1957.

 

137
   
“vagotropic nervous system”
: Sakel,
Schizophrenia
, 189.

 

137
   
“deliberately abandoned the normal scientific procedure”
: Ibid., 188.

 

137
   
“accidents”
: Sakel,
Schizophrenia
, 188.

 

137
   
“courageously persisted in his experiments”
: Frostig, “Clinical Observations
in Insulin Treatment of Schizophrenia”; Jessner and Ryan,
Shock Treatment in Psychiatry
, 4.

 

138
   
“Beyond this point”
: Jessner and Ryan,
Shock Treatment,
11.

 

138
   
“One is frequently surprised”
: Ibid., 27–28.

 

139
   
One of our patients
: Ibid., 44.

 

139
   
“the result of research”
: von Meduna, “The Significance of the Convulsive Reaction,” 140.

 

140
   
Paracelsus, the sixteenth-century Swiss physician
: Pearce, “Leopold Auenbrugger,” 105.

 

140
   
Although one doctor went so far
: Jessner and Ryan,
Shock Treatment
, 65; see also Kennedy, “Critical Review: The Treatment of Mental Disorders by Induced Convulsions.”

 

141
   
the patient got out
: Fink, “Meduna and the Origins of Convulsive Therapy,” 1036.

 

141
   
“a swindler, a humbug, a cheat”
: Ibid.

 

142
   
The Hungarian missed no opportunity
: von Meduna, “The Significance of the Convulsive Reaction.”

 

142
   
a vast anti-Semitic conspiracy
: Shorter and Healy,
Shock Therapy,
20.

 

142
   
His technique was simple
: Shorter,
History of Psychiatry
, 218.

 

142
   
“not using the much simpler method”
: Quoted in Shorter and Healy,
Shock Therapy
, 35.

 

142
   
no one raised an objection
: Shorter,
History of Psychiatry
, 219.

 

143
   
a pair of electrified forceps
: Impastatao, “Story of the First Electroshock Treatment,” 1113.

 

143
   
the seizure-inducing dose
: Shorter and Healy,
Shock Therapy
, 36.

 

143
   
“calm, well oriented”
: Ibid., 37–42.

 

143
   
A new word entered the Italian language
: Ibid., 44.

 

144
   
even Meduna hailed
: Jessner and Ryan,
Shock Treatment
, xiv.

 

144
   
“Our patients seem”
: Shorter and Healy,
Shock Therapy
, 73.

 

144
   
“driv[ing] the Devil out of our patients”
: Ibid., 30.

 

144
   
“bedevil the psychotic”
: Jessner and Ryan,
Shock Treatment
, xi.

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