Texas Tech University Press
Menu


   

B O O K S

Joseph Conrad and Psychological Medicine

Click for larger image



06/2002. xxiii, 277 pages.
0896724832
978-0-89672-483-9

$36.95 cloth



Coming soon: online ordering! In the meantime, please call 800.832.4042 or 806.742.2982 to order.

Joseph Conrad and Psychological Medicine

By Martin Bock
Foreword by Robert Hampson

Conrad’s life and fiction are often read through the lens of Freudian thought, though Conrad understood his own health from a pre-Freudian perspective. Joseph Conrad and Psychological Medicine recovers that perspective, revises our understanding of Conrad’s life, and rethinks the dominant themes of his work in light of pre-Freudian medical psychology.

Beginning with a social history of late-nineteenth-century medical psychology and hysteria studies, Bock’s study presents a clear and readable synopsis of fin-de-siècle theories of nervous disorder and moral insanity, shows how Conrad’s doctors were trained in medical theories that privilege the physiological over the psychological, and describes what Conrad endured during his water cures at Champel-les-Bains and in an English culture that constructed nervous disease—particularly his diagnosed neurasthenia—as a feminine disorder.

Joseph Conrad and Psychological Medicine reads Conrad’s fiction medically, showing how Conrad’s work focuses on such narrative strategies as Conrad’s rhetoric of hysteria and enervation and his vivid, nervous descriptions, and it shows how major tropes such as restraint, seclusion, and water— all treatments for insanity—were important issues in the medical discourse of Conrad’s day and are themes that run through Conrad’s fiction.

Bock’s study also suggests that Conrad’s major breakdown of 1910 was an epiphany, an event Conrad feared for decades but that afterwards allowed him to shift the interests of his fiction. The post-breakdown fiction offers less brooding and more allegorized narrations of Conrad’s medical history as he moves towards a greater acceptance, late in his life, of his gender and sexuality.


Before Freud
Conrad's Water Cures
Conrad's Breakdown
The Vivid, Nervous Descriptions of Conrad's Fiction
Restraint
Solitude/Seclusion
Water
Medical Allegory in the Later Novels




Home  |  Search  |  TTUP News  |  Books  |  Journals  |  About the Press  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy  |  Site Map Texas Tech University logo


© 2006 Texas Tech University Press  |  2903 4th Street, Suite 201  |  Lubbock, TX 79409-1037  |  800.832.4042