Shell-Shock as a Social Disease

Both during and after the 1914-18 war, shell-shocked men joined others labelled as deviants in the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Stereotypes were available to cope with an avalanche of psychiatric casualties, the treatment of whom was uncertain and mostly ineffective. When lost for...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of contemporary history 2000-01, Vol.35 (1), p.101-108
1. Verfasser: Mosse, George L.
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description Both during and after the 1914-18 war, shell-shocked men joined others labelled as deviants in the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Stereotypes were available to cope with an avalanche of psychiatric casualties, the treatment of whom was uncertain and mostly ineffective. When lost for aetiology or proven treatment, both doctors and those who wrote about manliness and morale converged on a notion of shell shock which located it within the degenerate categories well known at the time.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Anxiety
Deviance
Disease
Masculinity
Men
Mental disorders
Mental Illness
Nerves
Nervous system diseases
Perceptions
Physicians
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Psychiatry
Psychology (shell shock)
Shell shock
Social Perception
Sociology
Soldiers
Stereotypes
Trauma
Victims
War
We they distinction
World War I
World War One
title Shell-Shock as a Social Disease
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