Read Gracefully Insane Online

Authors: Alex Beam

Gracefully Insane (37 page)

CHAPTER 10 DIAGNOSIS: “HIPPIEPHRENIA”
Dr. Alan Stone’s comments on “hippiephrenia” appeared in the Summer 2000 issue of the
Boston Review.
In addition to the cited interviews, I also used the
Time
magazine cover story (March 1, 1971), a
New York Times Magazine
story (February 21, 1971), a long article by Timothy Crouse in
Rolling Stone
(February 18, 1971), and the
Rolling Stone
interview with James Taylor (September 6, 1979) to flesh out details of the Taylor family’s pursuits in the early 1970s. The song fragment is quoted with James Taylor’s permission.
Music therapist Paul Roberts shared his reports on his work at McLean with me.
CHAPTER 11 PHYSICIAN, HEAL THYSELF
Walter Jackson Freeman’s book is
Psychiatrist: Personalities and Patterns
(New York: Grune and Stratton, 1968). The article by Charles Rich and Ferris Pitts appeared in the
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
in August 1980. McLean doctors spoke to me about Doris Menzer-Benaron and Mark Altschule. There is a very interesting videotaped interview with Altschule in the Harvard Medical School’s Countway Library of Medicine.
McLean provided me with Dr. Harvey Shein’s curriculum vitae. Other biographical details came from interviews, primarily with his childhood friend John Livingstone. Shein and Stone published three major works on suicide: “Psychotherapy of the Hospitalized Suicidal Patient,”
American Journal of Psychotherapy,
vol. 22: 15-25, 1968; “Psychotherapy Designed To Detect and Treat Suicidal Potential,”
American Journal of Psychiatry,
March 1969; and “Monitoring and Treatment of Suicidal Potential within the Context of Psychotherapy,”
Comprehensive Psychotherapy,
January 1969. Shein’s paper on loneliness and isolation appeared in the
American Journal of Psychotherapy,
January 1974.
CHAPTER 12 LIFE GOES ON
There is no shortage of information on the parlous state of modern mental health. Two of my sources were Edward Shorter’s history of psychiatry and T.M. Lurhmann’s
Of Two Minds
(New York: Knopf, 2000), which provided the quote about McLean looking like London after the Blitz.
Under Observation,
by Dr. Alexander Vuckovic and Lisa Berger (New York: Ticknor and Fields, 1994), gives excellent insights into the workings of McLean during the early 1990s. The catalog for the art auction is in the McLean archives.
Index
Adams, Clover
Adams, Henry
Adams, John
Adams, John Quincy
Adams family
“Adjustment reaction of adolescence,”
“An Adolescent Program Needed,”
Adolescent psychiatry
Adolescent treatment center
“Adolescent turmoil,”
Agassiz, Louis
Albert Lasker Award
Alcott, Bronson
Alfred Stanton Room
Almshouse
Altschule, Julia
Altschule, Mark
American Chemical Society
American Journal of Insanity
American Medical Association
American Notes
(Dickens)
American Psychiatric Association
American Retirement Corporation
American Scholar
Ames, James Barr
Ames, Lois
Amory, Cleveland
Anesthesia
and electroshock therapy
and lobotomies
Anne Sexton and Her Kind
Antipsychotic drugs.
See also individual drugs
Apple record label
Appleton, William
Appleton Hall
Architecture, at McLean Hospital
Arlington Cottage
Arlington School
Arnold Arboretum
Arno’s
“Around and About McLean,”
Asher, Peter
Astral Weeks
Asylums
in Europe
See also individual asylums
Atlantic Monthly
Audubon Society
Austen Riggs sanitarium
Awful Rowing Towards God
(Sexton)
Axelrod, Julius
Baez, Joan
Bagg, Robert
Baker, Charles
Baker, Newton D.
Balanced Budget Act
Ball, Margaret
Bands. See also Music therapy
Barnes, Albert
Barnhouse, Ruth Tiffany
and Plath, Sylvia
Barnstone, Aliki
Barrell, Joseph
Barrell estate
Bayliss, Jonathan
Beacon Hill
Beacon Hill Civic Association
Beard, Charles
Beatles, the
Beck, Jeff
Beck, T. Romeyn
Beebe family
“Behind the Screen: Poems from the Female Maximum Security Hall,”
Belknap Hall
Bell, Luther
The Bell Jar
(Plath)
Belmont, Massachusetts
Belmont Conservation Commission
Bemis, William Otis
Berger, Lisa
Bergman, Stephen (pseud. Samuel Shem)
Berklee School of Music
Bernhard, Duke of Saxe Weimar-Eisenach
Beth Israel Hospital
Bicetre Asylum
Bidart, Frank
Bijur, Abraham
Bijur, Anjelika “Angie,”
Biltmore hotel
Bini, Lucio
Birth-control pill,
Bishop, Elizabeth
Bite treatments (mosquito, rat)
Blaine, Anita
Bleeding
Bleuler, Eugen
Blood injection treatments
Bloomingdale Asylum
Bonaparte, Joseph
Bond, Douglas
Bond, Earl
Bond, Thomas
Bonnard, Pierre
Borderline personality disorder (BPD)
Boston Evening Transcript
Boston Globe
Boston Lunatic Hospital
Boston Museum of Fine Arts
Boston Psychoanalytic Institute
Boston Psychopathic Hospital
Boston and Albany railroad
Boston Real Paper
Boston Sunday Globe
Boston Symphony Orchestra
Boston Tea Party
Boston University
Bowditch, Nathaniel Ingersoll
Bowditch Hall
“Bowen, Julia,”
Bower, Willis
Bowl, the
Boyle, Rosalie
Boyle, T. Coraghessan
BPD.
See
Borderline personality disorder
Brackett, Nathaniel, Jr.
Bragg, Terry
Brandeis University
Braque, Georges
Bridgewater State Hospital for the Criminally Insane
Brill, Abraham
Broadmoor psychiatric prison
Brock, Alice
Broderick, Matthew
Bromberg, David
Brooks, Swepson
Brother Ray
(Charles)
“Brown-eyed Girl,”
Brunswick, Ruth Mack
Bryn Mawr
Budson, Richard
Buffalo State Asylum
Bulfinch, Charles
Bunker Hill
Bureau of Vital Statistics
Burgholzli Psychiatric Clinic
Burke, Kenneth
Butler, John
Butler Hospital
Byrd, Richard
Calomel
Cambridge
Capp, Al
“Carolina Day,”
“Casey at the Bat” (Edward Scofield)
Catcher in the Rye
(Salinger)
Cerletti, Ugo
Chagall, Marc
Chambers Brothers
Channing Sanitarium
Charenton Asylum
Charity patients
Charles, Ray
Charles River
Charles River Boys
Charlestown
Charlestown Asylum
Chestnut Lodge sanitarium
Chicago Art Institute
Chicago symphony
Chloral hydrate
Choras, Peter
Clark, Pierce
Classical High School
Clinton, Bill
Clinton, Hillary Rodham
Close to Home
(Heilner)
Club
Cochineal
Codman Hall
Coercion chair
Cohen, Bruce
Cole, Jonathan
Coles, Robert
Conservation Commission
Constitutional medicine
Continuous bath therapy
Continuous sleep therapy
Corday, Charlotte
Corey, Stephen
Cornell Medical School
Cornell University
Coser, Rose
Cosmopolitan
magazine
Cost of stay, at McLean Hospital
Cottages, at McLean Hospital
Cotting, Sarah
Cotton, Henry
Craig House
Cu, Wellington
Cultural opportunities, at McLean Hospital
Cummings, E. E.
Cummings, Marion
“Cyprus Avenue,”
Daniels, Edward
Danish twins study
Dauernarkose.
See
Continuous sleep therapy
David, Jacques-Louis
Death in Venice
(Mann)
The Death of Marat
(David)
Declaration of Independence
Defoe, Daniel
de Havilland, Olivia
Deutsch, Albert
Dewey, John
Dexter, Katharine
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV (DSM-IV)
The Dial
Diana: In Search of Herself
(Smith)
Diana, Princess
Dickens, Charles
Dictionary of Psychology
Dinsmore, Paul
Discretion, at McLean Hospital
“Doctor Man,”
Dos Passos, John
Dover, Thomas
Dover’s powder
Dreams in the Mirror
(Kennedy)
Drug therapy.
See also individual drugs
DSM-IV. See Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV
Dylan, Bob
East House
ECT.
See
Electroconvulsive therapy
Edinburg, Golda
Effects of Psychotherapy in Schizophrenia, I and II,
Egasmoniz, António
Elders, the
Electric light bath
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).
See also
Electroshock therapy
Electroshock therapy
and Plath, Sylvia
See also
Electroconvulsive therapy
Eli Lilly Company
Eliot, George
Eliot, T. S.
Eliot Chapel
Eliot family
Ellenberg, John
Ellis, George
Emerson, Edward Bliss
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Robert Bulkeley
“Encounter, Psychiatric Institute” (Plunkett)
Enders, John
England, asylums in
Epilepsy
Epsom salts
Erikson, Erik
Escapes
Estelle’s
Ether
Etiquette
Everett, Frank
Evipal
Exploratory, insight-oriented (EIO) therapy
Favill, Henry
Fehmer and Page (architects)
Fever inducement
Fitzgerald, F. Scott
Fitzgerald, Zelda
Fleury, Robert
Fogg Museum
Folsom, William
Fomentation
Food, at McLean Hospital
Forced normalization theory
“For the Union Dead” (Robert Lowell)
“Fragment for Anne” (Plunkett)
France, asylums in
Frazier, Shervert
Freeman, Walter Jackson
Freeman-Watts procedure.
See also
Lobotomies
Freud, Sigmund
and Frink, Horace
and Liebman, Carl
and psychoses
and Thayer, Scofield
Freud and His Followers
(Roazen)
Friedrich, Otto
“Friendship” (Emerson)
Frink, Doris
Frink, Helen
Frink, Horace
Frink, John
Fromm-Reichmann, Frieda
Frost, Robert
Fuller, Margaret
Garland, Jeff
George III,
Germany, asylums in
Gifford Lectures
Girl, Interrupted
(Kaysen)
Girl, Interrupted
(movie)
Glenside Lodge
Glory
Goddard College
Goldman, Emma
Golf
Graceland Cemetery
Grand hotel (Venice)
Grateful Dead
Great and Desperate Cures
(Valenstein)
Greatest Generation, the
The Great Moment
Green, Hannah
Gregory, Alyse
Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital
Grounds, at McLean Hospital
Gunderson, John
Gyrator
Hall, G. Stanley
Hall-Mercer
Hamilton, Gilbert van Tassel
Hartford Retreat
Harvard alumni magazine
Harvard Club.
See also
Upham Hall
Harvard Faculty Club
Harvard Law School
Harvard Medical School
Harvard Mental Health Newsletter
Harvard University
and constitutional medicine
and Partners HealthCare System
and Shaw, Louis Agassiz
Hashish, tincture of
Health maintenance organizations
Heilner, Sam
Hereditary degeneration

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