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Zusatztext "Madness in Cold War America will undoubtedly be beneficial to scholars and graduate students interested in the psychiatric! political! and cultural impact of mental illness! both past and present."- John Little! American University! USA Informationen zum Autor Alexander Dunst is Assistant Professor of American Studies at the University of Paderborn. Klappentext This study presents a cultural history of madness in the Cold War, tracing its origins in the transfer of European psychology, the re-evaluation of psychosis in the Sixties and the retreat of the left under Reagan. Tropes of madness dramatize the conflict between social determination and personal will and ultimately imagine a sociality beyond liberal individualism. Zusammenfassung This study presents a cultural history of madness in the Cold War, tracing its origins in the transfer of European psychology, the re-evaluation of psychosis in the Sixties and the retreat of the left under Reagan. Tropes of madness dramatize the conflict between social determination and personal will and ultimately imagine a sociality beyond liberal individualism. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Introduction: Cold War Madness 2. The Pathologies of Dissent: Constructing the Cold War Psyche 3. Practical Cures: From Radical Psychiatry to Self Help 4. A Sane Madness?: Psychosis and Cold War Countercultures 5. Paranoid Narrative: Writing the Secret History of the Cold War 6. A Schizophrenic Postmodernity: Literary Studies and the Politics of Critique