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Heart's Work: Civil War Heroine and Champion of the Mentally Ill, Dorothea Lynde Dix - Hardcover

 
9781557784193: Heart's Work: Civil War Heroine and Champion of the Mentally Ill, Dorothea Lynde Dix
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A biography of Dorothea Dix, the reformer who fought for humane treatment of the mentally ill

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From Kirkus Reviews:
A failed attempt to arouse interest in the work of Dorothea Dix, who, in the 19th century, devoted her considerable talents to establishing hospitals for the needy insane. Schlaifer, a longtime advocate of improved treatment of the mentally ill, and prolific science-writer Freeman (coauthor, Our Wish to Kill, p. 312, etc.) have produced a dull biography of a woman who must have been anything but dull. They rely heavily on an 1891 biography of Dix by Francis Tiffany, which may account in part for the stilted and often oddly archaic tone of the present volume (``Dorothea would occupy her hospital home for five years as she suffered a lasting exhaustion and the pain of the steadily advancing disease of which she died--ossification of the lining membranes of the arteries''). Less explicable is the disjointedness of the narrative and why, although the subtitle dubs Dix a Civil War heroine, less than a half-dozen pages are devoted to her Civil War activities. Throughout her life, Dix shrank from publicity, and she wrote no memoirs; indeed, her first biographer commented that ``no real information is to be had about her.'' Schlaifer and Freeman fail to change this. In a final chapter, they do attempt to explain Dix's lifelong concern with helping the mentally disturbed by linking it to her own unhappy childhood--a psychoanalytic leap that might well have been strongly resented by Dix. A plodding biography of a remarkable woman. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly:
In an era when woman's work centered primarily on hearth and home. Dorothea Lynde Dix won the respect of men and women alike through her quiet determination and selfless dedication to help those imprisoned in troubled minds. Freud was just a boy during the years Dix traveled across the United States, later to Europe and Japan, to found scores of hospitals for the indigent insane. Weakened by chronic tuberculosis, Dix doggedly pursued her cause. During the Civil War, she put her work for the mentally ill on hold to supervise nurses who treated wounded soldiers. Despite her ill health, Dix lived to be 85, dying in 1887 in the first hospital she had founded, in Trenton, N.J. Schlaifer (coauthor of Action for Mental Health ) and Freeman ( Fight Against Fears ) tell Dix's story in a matter-of-fact, somewhat plodding manner, using letters to illustrate the profound effect she had on her friends and fellow citizens. The last chapter attempts to analyze the psychodynamic forces impelling Dix to forgo marriage and motherhood and help outcasts. Although interesting, it seems like an afterthought.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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  • PublisherParagon House
  • Publication date1991
  • ISBN 10 1557784191
  • ISBN 13 9781557784193
  • BindingHardcover
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages175
  • Rating

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Schlaifer, Charles; Freeman, Lucy
Published by Paragon House (1991)
ISBN 10: 1557784191 ISBN 13: 9781557784193
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