Literature DB >> 28446834

The Intimate Geographies of Panic Disorder: Parsing Anxiety through Psychopharmacological Dissection.

Felicity Callard1.   

Abstract

The category of panic disorder was significantly indebted to early psychopharmacological experiments (in the late 1950s and early 1960s) by the psychiatrist Donald Klein, in collaboration with Max Fink. Klein's technique of "psychopharmacological dissection" underpinned his transformation of clinical accounts of anxiety and was central in effecting the shift from agoraphobic anxiety (with its spatial imaginary of city squares and streets) to panic. This technique disaggregated the previously unitary affect of anxiety-as advanced in psychoanalytic accounts-into two physiological and phenomenological kinds. "Psychopharmacological dissection" depended on particular modes of clinical observation to assess drug action and to interpret patient behavior. The "intimate geographies" out of which panic disorder emerged comprised both the socio-spatial dynamics of observation on the psychiatric ward and Klein's use of John Bowlby's model of separation anxiety-as it played out between the dyad of infant and mother-to interpret his adult patients' affectively disordered behavior. This essay, in offering a historical geography of mid-twentieth-century anxiety and panic, emphasizes the importance of socio-spatial setting in understanding how clinical and scientific experimentation opens up new ways in which affects can be expressed, shaped, observed, and understood.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 28446834      PMCID: PMC5402871          DOI: 10.1086/688503

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Osiris        ISSN: 0369-7827            Impact factor:   0.548


  26 in total

1.  DELINEATION OF TWO DRUG-RESPONSIVE ANXIETY SYNDROMES.

Authors:  D F KLEIN
Journal:  Psychopharmacologia       Date:  1964-06-08

2.  Psychological factors affecting individual differences in behavioral response to convulsive therapy.

Authors:  M FINK; R L KAHN; M POLLACK
Journal:  J Nerv Ment Dis       Date:  1959-03       Impact factor: 2.254

3.  The loss of serendipity in psychopharmacology.

Authors:  Donald F Klein
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2008-03-05       Impact factor: 56.272

4.  Jonathan O. Cole, MD (1925-2009): Innovator in clinical psychopharmacology and of the ECDEU/NCDEU tradition.

Authors:  Nina R Schooler
Journal:  J Clin Psychiatry       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 4.384

5.  School phobia: diagnostic considerations in the light of imipramine effects.

Authors:  R Gittelman-Klein; D F Klein
Journal:  J Nerv Ment Dis       Date:  1973-03       Impact factor: 2.254

6.  Importance of psychiatric diagnosis in prediction of clinical drug effects.

Authors:  D F Klein
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1967-01

7.  Lactate metabolism in anxiety neurosis.

Authors:  F N Pitts; J N McClure
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1967-12-21       Impact factor: 91.245

8.  Increasing the impact of cluster analysis research: the case of psychiatric classification.

Authors:  H A Skinner; R K Blashfield
Journal:  J Consult Clin Psychol       Date:  1982-10

9.  A study of agoraphobic housewives.

Authors:  D Buglass; J Clarke; A S Henderson; N Kreitman
Journal:  Psychol Med       Date:  1977-02       Impact factor: 7.723

10.  The Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression: The making of a "gold standard" and the unmaking of a chronic illness, 1960-1980.

Authors:  Michael Worboys
Journal:  Chronic Illn       Date:  2012-11-21
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  1 in total

1.  Quantitative classification as (re-)descriptive psychopathology.

Authors:  Peter Zachar
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2018-10       Impact factor: 49.548

  1 in total

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