By Leticia Fernández-Fontecha Situated between the history of pain, history of childhood and history of emotions, this innovative work explores cultural understandings of children’s pain, from the 1870s to the end of the Second World War. Focusing on British medical discourse, Leticia Fernández-Fontecha examines the relationship between the experience of pain and its social and medical perception, looking at how pain is felt, seen and performed in contexts such as the hospital, the war nursery and the asylum. By means of a comparative study of views in different disciplines – physiology, paediatrics, psychiatry, psychology and psychoanalysis – this work demonstrates the various ways in which the child in pain came to be perceived. This context is vital to understanding current practices and beliefs surrounding childhood pain, and the role that children play in the construction of adult worlds.
Product Details
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Publication date : April 3, 2025
Language : English
ISBN-10 : 1009558730
ISBN-13 : 978-1009558730

Dermatologic Ultrasound with Clinical and Histologic Correlations 2013
Telemedicine and Electronic Medicine
Principles and Applications of Radiological Physics: With Pageburst Online Access
Case-Based Brain Imaging (RadCases) 2nd Edition
Ultrasound of the Hand and Upper Extremity: A Step-by-Step Guide 1st Edition
History of Infectious Disease Pandemics in Urban Societies 


Reviews
There are no reviews yet.