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No copies in OCLC.
Stressed the harmfulness of overprotection; originally published 1938-1942 in a series of six papers in Psychiatry.
Possibly the first free thought guide to child rearing. A New York city psychiatrist, socialist, and rationalist, Liber was a Jewish immigrant from (I think) Rumania. His earliest publications in the 1910s were in Yiddish; from 1921 most of his writing was in English, beginning with this remarkable, though now completely forgotten, manual for rearing children. Liber advocates birth control, never punishing children, not enrolling them in organized religions, encouraging the questioning of beliefs and association with people of color, etc. His guide was translated into French, German, Romanian, Spanish, and Chinese. Chapter six (Advice and Discussion, pages 173-248) was added to this third edition. In it Liber both answers queries submitted by earlier readers of his book and reprints reviews with his response to them.
Moodie was medical director of the London Child Guidance Clinic.
No copy located in OCLC.
Includes chapters on: Psychopathology, Children's Disorders, Adult Disorders, and Methods of Treatment.
Pinkerton was Lecturer in Pediatric Psychiatry at the University of Liverpool.
37 papers including 2 by Meduna on carbon dioxide therapy; Frank Ayd on lobotomy; Henry Miles et al on evaluation of psychotherapy of 62 cases of anxiety neurosis; Harley Shands on sever trauma; Franklin Du Bois on compulsion neurosis with anorexia nervosa; George Mahl & Eugene Brody on chronic anxiety symptomatology, experimental stress, and HCL secretion; Nartbua F, Farnham on childhood hysteria; 2 papers by Spitz on anxiety in infancy and psychiatric therapy in infancy.
Richards, who also wrote a Meyerian textbook for nurses, was from 1920 to 1930 on the faculty of Psychiatry at Hopkins (an early if not the first member of that department); in 1931 she became Chief of the Psychopathic Division of Baltimore City Hospital.
Contains a historical chapter.
This second printing updates the status of two of the children (Mildred and Kenneth).
Contains Emmy Sylvester "Developmental Truisms and Their Fate in Child Rearing"; John Bowlby "Some Pathological Processes Engendered by Early Mother-Child Separation"; Gerald Caplan "Clinical Observations on the Emotional Life of Children in the Communal Settlements in Israel"; Katherine M. Wolf "Observation of Individual Tendencies in the Second Yer of Life."
Contains George Peter Murdoch & John W. M. Whiting's "Cultural Determination of Parental Attitudes"; T. C. Schneirla's "A Consideration of Some Problems in the Ontogeny of Family Life and Social Adjustments in Various Infrahuman Animals"; Lawrence K. Frank's "Working Toward Healthy Personality."
Hunter & Macalpine pp.221-24; Meynell #3, pp. 17-21; GM-5 #63. A more scholarly edition than the 1848 translation. Text entirely in Latin."Competing theories about hysteria circulated in the latter half of the [17th] century. London physician Thomas Sydenham used the term in a nonspecific sense to signify any mental disorder short of what we would call outright psychosis" [Stone Healing the Mind, p.42]. Sydenham, for whom hysteria was a catch-all category more or less corresponding to what we call 'neurosis,' diagnosed hysteria in a sixth of his patients, noting that depression often accompanied the symptoms and that they could co-exist with physical disease. Also contains separate discussions of madness.
Hunter & Macalpine pp.221-24; Meynell pp. 17-21. First issued by the Sydenham Society in Latin in 1844 in with more scholarly apparatus than this translation.
The meetings were held, respectively, in Geneva (1953), London (1954), London (1955), and Geneva (1956).
Supplements Goldfarb's bibliography, which included material through 1954.
Includes an enuretic and a tic case.
The report of the APA Task Force on Standards for Psychiatric Facilities for Children.
A study and evaluation of programs that offered child guidance clinic service on a state-wide basis. Part I describes the background of clinical child psychiatry in the US and the cultural setting in which it operated. Part II discusses clinics financed by state governments. Part II suggests that many difficulties faced by such clinics were traceable to lack of well-defined objectives.
OCLC locates four copies: Cambridge in England and Princeton, Ohio State, & Washington University in the USA.Section 1: Child Psychiatry (A-J)
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