Sign in
NetworkOfCare.org
April 2017 - Advances in the History of Psychology
Blog Help
Advances in the History of Psychology
Home
Syndication
RSS for Posts
Atom
RSS for Comments
Recent Posts
Advances in the History of Psychology, 2007-2023
Tune in, Turn on: Religious Music and Spiritual Power in the History of Psychedelic Therapy
The neglected object: A history of the concept of dreams in Polish psychiatry and psychology in the interwar period, 1918–1939
Dance becomes therapeutic in the mid to late 20th century
Beauty and the Brain: The Science of Human Nature in Early America
Tags
APA Monitor
asylum
Blogs
Book Reviews
Books
BPS
call for papers
Centre for the History of Psychological Disciplines
Conferences
digital history
Events
General
Germany
History of Psychology Centre
Interview
Journals
Links
News
Other
Podcasts
psychiatry
psychoanalysis
Resources
UCL
Video
View more
Archives
August 2023 (1)
July 2023 (1)
June 2023 (12)
May 2023 (14)
April 2023 (11)
March 2023 (12)
February 2023 (19)
January 2023 (9)
December 2022 (15)
November 2022 (18)
October 2022 (15)
September 2022 (27)
August 2022 (4)
July 2022 (11)
June 2022 (9)
May 2022 (9)
April 2022 (11)
March 2022 (13)
February 2022 (17)
January 2022 (14)
December 2021 (26)
November 2021 (23)
October 2021 (21)
September 2021 (24)
August 2021 (25)
July 2021 (30)
June 2021 (23)
May 2021 (34)
April 2021 (26)
March 2021 (22)
February 2021 (25)
January 2021 (4)
December 2020 (11)
November 2020 (22)
October 2020 (20)
September 2020 (30)
August 2020 (14)
July 2020 (26)
June 2020 (15)
May 2020 (19)
April 2020 (20)
February 2020 (1)
January 2020 (21)
November 2019 (3)
October 2019 (17)
September 2019 (3)
August 2019 (6)
July 2019 (11)
June 2019 (7)
May 2019 (31)
April 2019 (4)
March 2019 (10)
February 2019 (10)
January 2019 (1)
December 2018 (9)
August 2017 (10)
July 2017 (17)
June 2017 (4)
May 2017 (15)
April 2017 (12)
March 2017 (11)
February 2017 (14)
January 2017 (10)
December 2016 (13)
November 2016 (8)
October 2016 (3)
September 2016 (8)
August 2016 (8)
July 2016 (14)
June 2016 (12)
May 2016 (6)
April 2016 (9)
March 2016 (16)
February 2016 (12)
January 2016 (19)
December 2015 (8)
November 2015 (14)
October 2015 (13)
September 2015 (12)
August 2015 (13)
July 2015 (17)
June 2015 (17)
May 2015 (13)
April 2015 (12)
March 2015 (5)
February 2015 (10)
January 2015 (6)
December 2014 (7)
November 2014 (8)
October 2014 (5)
September 2014 (4)
August 2014 (4)
July 2014 (4)
June 2014 (3)
May 2014 (7)
April 2014 (10)
March 2014 (9)
February 2014 (12)
January 2014 (9)
December 2013 (5)
November 2013 (11)
October 2013 (18)
September 2013 (10)
August 2013 (5)
July 2013 (9)
June 2013 (10)
May 2013 (8)
April 2013 (7)
March 2013 (8)
February 2013 (8)
January 2013 (15)
December 2012 (4)
November 2012 (11)
October 2012 (7)
September 2012 (5)
August 2012 (4)
July 2012 (2)
June 2012 (6)
May 2012 (7)
April 2012 (10)
March 2012 (12)
February 2012 (11)
January 2012 (6)
December 2011 (3)
November 2011 (11)
October 2011 (10)
September 2011 (4)
August 2011 (1)
July 2011 (5)
June 2011 (5)
May 2011 (10)
April 2011 (14)
March 2011 (15)
February 2011 (16)
January 2011 (6)
December 2010 (6)
November 2010 (11)
October 2010 (8)
September 2010 (6)
August 2010 (1)
July 2010 (3)
June 2010 (5)
May 2010 (10)
April 2010 (9)
March 2010 (14)
February 2010 (8)
January 2010 (11)
December 2009 (6)
November 2009 (9)
October 2009 (15)
September 2009 (6)
Sort by:
Most Recent
|
Most Viewed
|
Most Commented
UCL/BPS Talks: Eghighian on “From Crackpots to Survivors: How Contact With Aliens Was Pathologised”
The British Psychological Society‘s History of Psychology Centre, in conjunction with UCL’s Centre for the History of the Psychological Disciplines, has announced the next talk in its summer seminar series. On Monday May 8th Greg Eghighian (right...
Published
Fri, Apr 28 2017 6:14 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Events
,
psychiatry
,
UCL
,
BPS
,
History of Psychology Centre
,
Greg Eghigian
,
Centre for the History of Psychological Disciplines
,
abductees
,
extraterrestrial visitors
,
flying saucers
,
psychotherapists
,
UFOs
NBN Interview: The Dancing Bees: Karl von Frisch & the Discovery of the Honeybee Language
The New Books Network (NBN) of podcasts has just released an interview with Tania Munz on her new book The Dancing Bees: Karl von Frisch and the Discovery of the Honeybee Language. As NBN describes, Tania Munz‘s new book is a dual biography: both of Austrian...
Published
Thu, Apr 27 2017 6:31 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Books
,
Language
,
Podcasts
,
Interview
,
New Books Network
,
Karl von Frisch
,
bees
New Article: Publish & Perish: Psychology’s Most Prolific Authors Are Not Always the Ones We Remember
Now in print in the Spring 2017 issue of the American Journal of Psychology is the most recent digital history piece by Christopher Green (left): “Publish and Perish: Psychology’s Most Prolific Authors Are Not Always the Ones We Remember.”...
Published
Tue, Apr 25 2017 1:34 PM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Journals
,
Christopher Green
,
American Journal of Psychology
,
digital history
,
psyborgs
,
publication trends
,
PSYCInfo
,
AJP
Workshop: Folk Psychology and Descriptive Psychology – in the Contexts of Historicism, Relativism and Naturalism
A workshop on “Folk Psychology and Descriptive Psychology – in the Contexts of Historicism, Relativism and Naturalism” will take place at the University of Vienna April 26th through 28th. Full details below. Folk Psychology and Descriptive...
Published
Mon, Apr 24 2017 6:15 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Events
,
folk psychology
,
historicism
,
descriptive psychology
,
relativism
,
naturalism
HHS Special Issue: Psychotherapy in Historical Perspective
The April 2017 issue of History of the Human Sciences is now online. Guest edited by Sarah Marks, this special issue explores “Psychotherapy in Historical Perspective.” Titles, authors, and abstracts follow below. “Psychotherapy in historical...
Published
Sun, Apr 23 2017 10:00 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Journals
,
psychiatry
,
autism
,
psychoanalysis
,
special issue
,
Jung
,
history of the human sciences
,
psychotherapy
,
asylums
,
neurodiversity
,
ECT
,
applied behaviour analysis
,
art therapy
,
Ole Ivar Lovaas
,
Daniel Hack Tuke
,
Israel
,
Sarah Marks
,
leucotomy
,
ABA
NBN Interview with Susanna Blumenthal on Law and the Modern Mind
New Books Network (NBN) has released an interview with legal historian Susanna L. Blumenthal on her recent book, Law and the Modern Mind: Consciousness and Responsibility in American Legal Culture. As NBN describes, Blumenthal offers a historical examination...
Published
Fri, Apr 21 2017 6:25 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
Books
,
insanity
,
Podcasts
,
Interview
,
law
,
legal history
,
common sense philosophy
Lobotomy on Retro Report: First, Do No Harm
The New York Times‘s Retro Report has produced a new video on the history of lobotomy, First, Do No Harm. As Retro Report describes, For centuries scientists have studied the brain and still our understanding, particularly when it comes to the treatment...
Published
Wed, Apr 19 2017 6:12 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Video
,
News
,
brain
,
lobotomy
,
Walter Freeman
,
mental illness
,
psychosurgery
,
Retro Report
,
New York Times
New NBN Podcast: Governing Habits: Treating Alcoholism in the Post-Soviet Clinic
The New Books Network (NBN) has just released an interview with anthropologist Eugene Raikhel on his recently released monograph Governing Habits: Treating Alcoholism in the Post-Soviet Clinic. As NBN describes, Alcoholism is a strange thing. That it...
Published
Sun, Apr 16 2017 11:02 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Books
,
anthropology
,
Podcasts
,
Interview
,
Russia
,
alcoholism
,
addiction
,
Soviet Union
,
narcology
,
AA
New Book: No Right to Be Idle: The Invention of Disability, 1840s–1930s
A new book exploring the history of disability in America may be of interest to AHP readers. Sarah F. Rose’s No Right to Be Idle: The Invention of Disability, 1840s–1930s is described by the University of North Carolina Press as, During the late...
Published
Fri, Apr 14 2017 6:40 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Books
,
disability
,
work
,
ability
,
productivity
,
labor history
New Articles Exploring Soviet Lobotomy and Freud in Cuban Psychiatry
The Spring 2017 issue of the Bulletin of the History of Medicine is now online. Included in this issue are two articles that may be of interest to AHP readers. The articles explore the 1950 ban on lobotomy in the Soviet Union and the fall of Freud in...
Published
Thu, Apr 13 2017 6:28 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Journals
New JHBS: Mental Testing, Random Sampling, & More!
The Spring 2017 issue of the Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences is now online. Articles in the issue explore the promotion of the scientific status of polling, Robert H. Lowie and the concept of culture, the work of Lawrence Krader, and...
Published
Wed, Apr 12 2017 6:26 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Journals
,
anthropology
,
culture
,
Alfred Binet
,
WWII
,
testing
,
individual differences
,
Lawrence Krader
,
Robert Lowie
,
mental association
,
public opinion
,
polling
New 5 Minute History Lession: David Boder
The Cummings Center for the History of Psychology continues its series 5 Minute History Lession with Episode 6: David Boder. The Center recently recovered Boder’s lost recordings of songs of the Holocaust, which he recorded during the summer of...
Published
Tue, Apr 11 2017 6:11 AM
by
Advances in the History of Psychology
Filed under:
General
,
Video
,
David Boder
,
Cummings Center
,
CCHP