Cursing Brain?

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Product details

  • ISBN 9780674003866
  • Weight: 635g
  • Dimensions: 149 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2000
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Over a century and a half ago, a French physician reported the bizarre behavior of a young aristocratic woman who would suddenly, without warning, erupt in a startling fit of obscene shouts and curses. The image of the afflicted Marquise de Dampierre echoes through the decades as the emblematic example of an illness that today represents one of the fastest-growing diagnoses in North America. Tourette syndrome is a set of behaviors, including recurrent ticcing and involuntary shouting (sometimes cursing) as well as obsessive-compulsive actions. The fascinating history of this syndrome reveals how cultural and medical assumptions have determined and radically altered its characterization and treatment from the early nineteenth century to the present.

A Cursing Brain? traces the problematic classification of Tourette syndrome through three distinct but overlapping stories: that of the claims of medical knowledge, that of patients' experiences, and that of cultural expectations and assumptions. Earlier researchers asserted that the bizarre ticcing and impromptu vocalizations were psychological--resulting from sustained bad habits or lack of self-control. Today, patients exhibiting these behaviors are seen as suffering from a neurological disease and generally are treated with drug therapy. Although current clinical research indicates that Tourette's is an organic disorder, this pioneering history of the syndrome reminds us to be skeptical of medical orthodoxies so that we may stay open to fresh understandings and more effective interventions.

Howard I. Kushner is Nat C. Robertson Distinguished Professor of Science & Society at Emory University, where he holds a joint appointment as Professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education at the Rollins School of Public Health and the Graduate Institute of Liberal Arts.

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