
Rd Laing Remains One Of The Most Famous Psychiatrists Of The Last 50 Years. In The 1960s He Enjoyed Enormous Popularity And Received Much Publicity For His Controversial Views Challenging The Psychiatric Orthodoxy. He Championed The Rights Of The Patient, And Challenged The Often Inhumane Methods Of Treating The Mentally Ill. Based On A Wealth Of Previously Unexamined Archives Relating To His Private Papers And Clinical Notes, Portrait Of The Psychiatrist As A Young Man Sheds New Light On Rd Laing, And In Particular His Early Formative Years - A Crucial But Largely Overlooked Period In His Life. The First Half Of The Book Considers Laing's Intellectual Journey Through The World Of Ideas And His Development As A Psychiatric Theorist. An Analysis Of His Notebooks And Personal Library Reveals Laing's Engagement Not Only With Psychiatric Theory, But Also With A Wide Range Of Other Disciplines, Such As Philosophy, Literature, And Religion. This Part Of The Book Considers How This Shaped Laing's Writing About Madness And His Evolution As A Clinician. The Second Half Draws On A Rich And Completely Unexplored Collection Of Laing's Clinical Notes, Which Detail His Encounters With Patients In His Early Years As A Psychiatrist, Firstly In The British Army, Subsequently In The Psychiatric Hospitals Of Glasgow, And Finally In The Tavistock Clinic In London. These Notes Reveal What Laing Was Actually Doing In Clinical Practice, And How Theory Interacted With Therapy. The Majority Of Patients Who Were To Appear In Laing's First Two Books, The Divided Self And The Self And Others Have Been Identified From These Records, And This Volume Provides A Fascinating Account Of How The Published Case Histories Compare To The Original Notes. There Is A Considerable Mythology Surrounding Laing, Partly Created By Himself And Partly By Subsequent Commentators. By A Careful Examination Of Primary Sources, Allan Beveridge, Both A Psychiatrist And An Historian, Examines The Many Mythological Narra
This work investigates the formative intellectual and clinical development of R. D. Laing, questioning how his early experiences and private writings shaped his later challenges to psychiatric orthodoxy. Allan Beveridge, a practicing psychiatrist and historian, utilizes a wealth of previously unexamined archives, including Laing's personal notebooks, library, and clinical records. By analyzing these primary sources, the author constructs a framework that connects Laing's early theoretical influences with his practical application of therapy in various institutional settings.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts highlight this text as a rigorous historical examination that successfully separates the mythology surrounding Laing from his actual clinical practice. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational resource for understanding the origins of mid-twentieth-century psychiatric theory.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
2011-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
0191625477
ISBN-13:
9780191625473
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