206 Pages
    by Routledge

    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is Volume XV of nineteen in the Abnormal and Clinical Psychology series. The psychiatrist by dealing with the total personality, tends to become a Jack-of-all trades; he measures his patients’ body-configuration and their mental abilities; he assesses his patients’ electro-encephalographic records and their paintings; he interferes with his patients’ cerebral structure and with their set of values, and so forth. Originally published in 1950, this study is a psychiatric one, it was intended for interested nonpsychiatric research workers as well, and in consequence the description of some phenomena had to be out of proportion to others.

    Chapter 1 Definitions and Approach; Chapter 2 Form in Psychotic Art; Chapter 3 The Content of Psychotic Art; Chapter 4 An Illustrative Case of Schizophrenia; Chapter 5 The Nature of Psychotic Art; Chapter 6 An Illustrative Case; Chapter 7 Interpretation of Psychotic Art; Chapter 8 Cultural Influences;

    Biography

    Francis Reitman