| Literature DB >> 31098650 |
Abstract
The Allied Forces policy of denazification and demilitarization during the early post-war period has had a lasting impact on medical disciplinary cultures in all occupation zones of Germany. By means of various control procedures, the conceptuality and linguistic design, the style and normative horizon of medical literature were reconstituted. This article examines this change using the example of psychiatry and neurology in the Soviet Occupation Zone. It deals with the neurological psychiatric textbook as a central medium of disciplinary communication and reconstructs how the knowledge in this field was processed and prepared in complex negotiation processes between authors, publishers and censors. The focus is on institutionalized filters of limited production of discourses and thus the archival holdings of censorship authorities, which have not yet been evaluated. The evaluation results are presented here with a focus on psychiatry and neurology and illustrated with selected case studies.Entities:
Keywords: Censorship; Denazification; Eugenics; History of medicine; Racial Hygiene; Science policy; Soviet Occupation Zone of Germany
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31098650 DOI: 10.1007/s00115-019-0726-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nervenarzt ISSN: 0028-2804 Impact factor: 1.214