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In Ruins (Hardcover): Daniel Davis Wood In Ruins (Hardcover)
Daniel Davis Wood
R638 Discovery Miles 6 380 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Dorothea Dix and Dr. Francis T. Stribling - An Intense Friendship (Hardcover): Alice Davis Wood Dorothea Dix and Dr. Francis T. Stribling - An Intense Friendship (Hardcover)
Alice Davis Wood
R829 Discovery Miles 8 290 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Dr. Francis T. Stribling (Hardcover): Alice Davis Wood Dr. Francis T. Stribling (Hardcover)
Alice Davis Wood
R777 Discovery Miles 7 770 Ships in 10 - 17 working days

Dr. Stribling was only twenty-six years old in 1836 when he became head of Western State hospital. Then, every institution for the insane in the South, and all but a very few in the remainder of the country, were little more than penitentiaries. Dr. Robert Hansen, superintendent of Western State Hospital, wrote in 1967, "In an age of the common man, Dr. Stribling possessed an uncommon and profound knowledge of human nature, and the importance of human relationships. He believed that the drives, interests, and needs of the insane were the same as those of others, and that satisfaction of them through human relationships, would help restore their reason." Stribling recognized that insanity was a disease that if treated early, was curable. He used medical and moral therapy, separately or in concert, to cure his patients. Moral medicine included early treatment, separating the violent from those who could be cured, eliminating restraints whenever possible, providing patients with nutritious food, occupation, exercise, amusements and religious services. Caretakers were instructed how to increase their patients' self-esteem, especially by being their friend. Stribling's efforts to admit only patients who could be cured resulted in a bitter dispute in the early 1840s between him and Dr. John Minson. Galt was head of Eastern State Hospital, the first institution in the Colonies built for the treatment of the insane. Soon thereafter, Stribling rewrote Virginia's laws concerning the insane to conform to his admission policies. In 1852, Stribling and his directors defended themselves against charges by Captain Randolph that they abused their patients. Randolph's son had been a patient at Western State. During the Civil War Stribling managed to provide for his patients even after Sheridan's troops sacked his hospital. The daily lives of slave servants are described and also the different approaches taken by Stribling and Galt provide for insane free blacks and insane slaves. The similarities and differences between the two young doctors are examined. (Stribling was twenty-six and Galt twenty-two when they assumed their positions.) Letters between Dr. Stribling and Dorothea Dix from 1849 until 1860 describe a deep and intimate friendship. Mrs. Stribling's letter to her eighteen-year-old son while he was a prisoner of war is probably representative of many letters from other mothers in the South and North who were in a similar situation. After the war, Stribing was successful after he petitioned Congress to keep his job. His reconciliation speech at the superintendents' meeting in Boston in 1868 was highly praised by his fellow superintendents and the Boston press. Dr. Stribling died in 1874.

Family in Crisis (Hardcover): Alice Davis Wood Family in Crisis (Hardcover)
Alice Davis Wood
R841 Discovery Miles 8 410 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Metamorphosis - A Book of Poems and Colouring Fun (Paperback): Helen Davis Wooding Metamorphosis - A Book of Poems and Colouring Fun (Paperback)
Helen Davis Wooding
R310 Discovery Miles 3 100 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
The Hopeless Romantic (Paperback): Elise Haley Clark, Davis Wood The Hopeless Romantic (Paperback)
Elise Haley Clark, Davis Wood; Noah Nicholas Hewitt
R190 Discovery Miles 1 900 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Splice - Anthology #1 (Paperback): Daniel Davis Wood Splice - Anthology #1 (Paperback)
Daniel Davis Wood
R406 Discovery Miles 4 060 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Unspeakable (Paperback): Daniel Davis Wood Unspeakable (Paperback)
Daniel Davis Wood
R235 Discovery Miles 2 350 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Verses (Hardcover): Bertha Gerneaux Davis Woods Verses (Hardcover)
Bertha Gerneaux Davis Woods
R766 Discovery Miles 7 660 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Verses (Hardcover): Bertha Gerneaux Davis Woods Verses (Hardcover)
Bertha Gerneaux Davis Woods
R766 Discovery Miles 7 660 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Blood and Bone (Paperback): Daniel Davis Wood Blood and Bone (Paperback)
Daniel Davis Wood
R343 Discovery Miles 3 430 Ships in 10 - 17 working days

'Blood and Bone' is the tale of a man haunted by the violent truths of his ancestry. Through his attempt to document the remarkable child-hood of his great-aunt Abigail, we are thrown into life at the Whangie, an austere outpost at the colonial frontier. With the death of her mother, eleven-year-old Abigail must learn to fend for herself against the cruel stewardship of her father. At war with the local Aboriginals and intent on staking his claim on the land at any cost, what occurs between the two is a stunning powerplay that exposes the limits of the human imagination. Inhabiting the speculative peripheries of the historical record, 'Blood and Bone' is an uncompromising exploration of Australia's dark history and its legacy today. Winner of the 2014 Viva La Novella prize.

Family in Crisis (Paperback): Alice Davis Wood Family in Crisis (Paperback)
Alice Davis Wood
R512 Discovery Miles 5 120 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Dorothea Dix and Dr. Francis T. Stribling - An Intense Friendship (Paperback): Alice Davis Wood Dorothea Dix and Dr. Francis T. Stribling - An Intense Friendship (Paperback)
Alice Davis Wood
R500 Discovery Miles 5 000 Ships in 10 - 17 working days
Dr. Francis T. Stribling and Moral Medicine - Curing the Insane at Virginia's Western State Hospital: 1836-1874... Dr. Francis T. Stribling and Moral Medicine - Curing the Insane at Virginia's Western State Hospital: 1836-1874 (Paperback)
Alice Davis Wood
R503 Discovery Miles 5 030 Ships in 10 - 17 working days

Dr. Stribling was only twenty-six years old in 1836 when he became head of Western State hospital. Then, every institution for the insane in the South, and all but a very few in the remainder of the country, were little more than penitentiaries. Dr. Robert Hansen, superintendent of Western State Hospital, wrote in 1967, "In an age of the common man, Dr. Stribling possessed an uncommon and profound knowledge of human nature, and the importance of human relationships. He believed that the drives, interests, and needs of the insane were the same as those of others, and that satisfaction of them through human relationships, would help restore their reason." Stribling recognized that insanity was a disease that if treated early, was curable. He used medical and moral therapy, separately or in concert, to cure his patients. Moral medicine included early treatment, separating the violent from those who could be cured, eliminating restraints whenever possible, providing patients with nutritious food, occupation, exercise, amusements and religious services. Caretakers were instructed how to increase their patients' self-esteem, especially by being their friend. Stribling's efforts to admit only patients who could be cured resulted in a bitter dispute in the early 1840s between him and Dr. John Minson. Galt was head of Eastern State Hospital, the first institution in the Colonies built for the treatment of the insane. Soon thereafter, Stribling rewrote Virginia's laws concerning the insane to conform to his admission policies. In 1852, Stribling and his directors defended themselves against charges by Captain Randolph that they abused their patients. Randolph's son had been a patient at Western State. During the Civil War Stribling managed to provide for his patients even after Sheridan's troops sacked his hospital. The daily lives of slave servants are described and also the different approaches taken by Stribling and Galt provide for insane free blacks and insane slaves. The similarities and differences between the two young doctors are examined. (Stribling was twenty-six and Galt twenty-two when they assumed their positions.) Letters between Dr. Stribling and Dorothea Dix from 1849 until 1860 describe a deep and intimate friendship. Mrs. Stribling's letter to her eighteen-year-old son while he was a prisoner of war is probably representative of many letters from other mothers in the South and North who were in a similar situation. After the war, Stribing was successful after he petitioned Congress to keep his job. His reconciliation speech at the superintendents' meeting in Boston in 1868 was highly praised by his fellow superintendents and the Boston press. Dr. Stribling died in 1874.

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