Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Bestseller
BestsellerE-Book
Author Young, Allan, 1938- author.

Title The Harmony of Illusions : Inventing Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder / Allan Young.

Publication Info. Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, 1997.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Internet  WORLD WIDE WEB E-BOOK EBSCO    Downloadable
Please click here to access this EBSCO resource
Description 1 online resource (327 pages)
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-319) and index.
Summary As far back as we know, there have been individuals incapacitated by memories that have filled them with sadness and remorse, fright and horror, or a sense of irreparable loss. Only recently, however, have people tormented with such recollections been diagnosed as suffering from "post-traumatic stress disorder." Here Allan Young traces this malady, particularly as it is suffered by Vietnam veterans, to its beginnings in the emergence of ideas about the unconscious mind and to earlier manifestations of traumatic memory like shell shock or traumatic hysteria. In Young's view, PTSD is not a timeless or universal phenomenon newly discovered. Rather, it is a "harmony of illusions," a cultural product gradually put together by the practices, technologies, and narratives with which it is diagnosed, studied, and treated and by the various interests, institutions, and moral arguments mobilizing these efforts. This book is part history and part ethnography, and it includes a detailed account of everyday life in the treatment of Vietnam veterans with PTSD. To illustrate his points, Young presents a number of fascinating transcripts of the group therapy and diagnostic sessions that he observed firsthand over a period of two years. Through his comments and the transcripts themselves, the reader becomes familiar with the individual hospital personnel and clients and their struggle to make sense of life after a tragic war. One observes that everyone on the unit is heavily invested in the PTSD diagnosis : boundaries between therapist and patient are as unclear as were the distinctions between victim and victimizer in the jungles of Southeast Asia.
Note Online resource; title from HTML home page (EBSCO, viewed October 13, 2014).
Local Note EBSCOhost SocINDEX with Full Text
Subject Post-traumatic stress disorder -- Philosophy.
Social epistemology.
Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic.
Philosophy, Medical.
Post-traumatic stress disorder -- Philosophy. (OCoLC)fst01072773
Social epistemology. (OCoLC)fst01122446
ISBN 0691017239 (Trade Paper)
1282935186
9781282935181
9780691017235
-->
Add a Review