Responses to Self Harm
An Historical Analysis of Medical, Religious, Military and Psychological Perspectives
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About the Book
Self harm is generally regarded as a modern epidemic, associated especially with young women. But references to self harm are found in the poetry of ancient Rome, the drama of ancient Greece and early Christian texts, including the Bible.
Studied by criminologists, doctors, nurses, psychologists, psychiatrists and sociologists, the actions of those who harm themselves are often alienating and bewildering. This book provides a historical and conceptual roadmap for understanding self harm across a range of times and places: in modern high schools and in modern warfare; in traditional religious practices and in avant-garde performance art. Describing the diversity of self harm as well as responses to it, this book challenges the understanding of it as a single behavior associated with a specific age group, gender or cultural identity.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Leigh Dale
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 276
Bibliographic Info: notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2015
pISBN: 978-0-7864-9675-4
eISBN: 978-1-4766-1925-5
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Preface 1
Sources 8
Introduction 11
Chapter 1. Classical and Christian Stories of Self Harm 19
Ethnographies of the Galli 21
Mythographies of Attis 28
Psychoanalysis and the Uses of Attis 37
Self Harm and Religious Expression 40
Modern Medicine and the Uses of Myth 49
Spectre and Spectacle: Self Harm as Performance 57
Chapter 2. Delicate Structures? Case Studies of Self Harm 62
Self Enucleation and Ingestion of Needles 64
Malingering Versus Mental Illness: Respecting Patients? 67
The Deserving Patient 73
The Undeserving Patient 79
Diagnosing and Disclosing Self Harm: Dermatology 84
Dermatology and the “mysterious mental element” 88
Responding to Self Harm 94
Demonizing Self Harm: Beverley Allitt and After 98
Chapter 3. Self Harm as Malingering: Criminology and
Military Medicine 103
Militant Medicine: Self Harm as Crime 106
Self Harm in Prison 112
Doctors Resisting? 117
The First World War 119
The Secret Battle 127
Conclusions 139
Chapter 4. The Alien Self: Psychiatry and Psychology 143
Criminology Finds the Psyche 144
Pierre Janet 148
The Unknown Ancestor: Dabrowski 154
Freud and His Followers: Brunswick, Lewis and Greenacre 156
Karl Menninger and Man Against Himself 159
Freud in Practice: Case Reports 162
Theorizing Self Harm: Otto Fenichel 165
Challenging Freud: Horney on Feminine Masochism 168
Reviving Feminine Masochism 173
Ferenczi and His Followers 177
Reflections: Reading Self Harm 187
The Impact of Self Harm 190
Behaviorism 199
Speculations on Siblings, Speech and Controlled Re-Enactment 204
The Language of Self Harm: Speech and Controlled
Re-Enactment 207
Researching Self Harm 214
Chapter Notes 221
Bibliography 235
Index 259