smein, Adhemar 257
Esquirol,Jean Etienne Dominique 263, 272,
279, 282, 289, 290, 291-92, 293, 326, 331,
338-40, 344, 345, 347, 349, 355-56, 3 6 6 Fsterson, Aaron 358
Index of Names 371 Ewald, Francois 37, 364
Ey, Henri 292, 326, 367
Faber, Knud 259
Fainberg, Victor 365
Falretjean-Pierre 117-18,119,141,152,168,170,
186-87,197,198,199, 212, 227, 228, 263, 290 Falret, Jules Philippe 230, 307, 321, 327, 332 Fassbinder, Maria 9 0
Fere, Charles 142, 230, 328
Fernald, Walter 213, 229
Ferrus, Guillaume Marie Andre 120, 153-54,
170, 197, 199, 212, 228, 230, 326 Fiorelli, Pieio 258
Fischer Homberger, Esther 330 Flaceliere, Robert 255, 2 6 0
Fleury, Louis Joseph Desire 327
Fodere, Francois Emmanuel 2, 3-4, 7, 15, 17, 29,
37, 94, 98,117,168, 224, 331 Foissac, Pierre 293
Foil in, Eugene Francois 294 Fonssagnves,Jean Baptiste 168 Fontana, Alessandro 264 Fontanille, Raphael 264 Fournet, Jules 108-9, 118, 120 Fournier, Allred 2 8 9
Foville, Achille (de) 141, 226, 263, 326, 327 Franchi,Jean 194
Francis ol Assisi (saint) 8 9
Francis de Sales (saint) 193
Frederick II 48
Freud, Sigmund 98, 138, 167, 170, 221,231,
292, 308, 321-22, 327, 332, 349 Funck-Brentano, Frantz 194
Caillac, Henri 90, 91
Galbraith, Georgina R.
Esquirol,Jean Etienne Dominique 263, 272,
279, 282, 289, 290, 291-92, 293, 326, 331,
338-40, 344, 345, 347, 349, 355-56, 3 6 6 Fsterson, Aaron 358
Index of Names 371 Ewald, Francois 37, 364
Ey, Henri 292, 326, 367
Faber, Knud 259
Fainberg, Victor 365
Falretjean-Pierre 117-18,119,141,152,168,170,
186-87,197,198,199, 212, 227, 228, 263, 290 Falret, Jules Philippe 230, 307, 321, 327, 332 Fassbinder, Maria 9 0
Fere, Charles 142, 230, 328
Fernald, Walter 213, 229
Ferrus, Guillaume Marie Andre 120, 153-54,
170, 197, 199, 212, 228, 230, 326 Fiorelli, Pieio 258
Fischer Homberger, Esther 330 Flaceliere, Robert 255, 2 6 0
Fleury, Louis Joseph Desire 327
Fodere, Francois Emmanuel 2, 3-4, 7, 15, 17, 29,
37, 94, 98,117,168, 224, 331 Foissac, Pierre 293
Foil in, Eugene Francois 294 Fonssagnves,Jean Baptiste 168 Fontana, Alessandro 264 Fontanille, Raphael 264 Fournet, Jules 108-9, 118, 120 Fournier, Allred 2 8 9
Foville, Achille (de) 141, 226, 263, 326, 327 Franchi,Jean 194
Francis ol Assisi (saint) 8 9
Francis de Sales (saint) 193
Frederick II 48
Freud, Sigmund 98, 138, 167, 170, 221,231,
292, 308, 321-22, 327, 332, 349 Funck-Brentano, Frantz 194
Caillac, Henri 90, 91
Galbraith, Georgina R.
Foucault-Psychiatric-Power-1973-74
Psychiatrie, vol.
3, October 1964, col.
37 930, G.
10, pp.
1-12.
On the La Borde clinic, see the special issue of the review Recherches, no.
21, March April 1976: Histoires de La Borde.
Dix ans de psychotherapie institutionelle a la clinique de Cour-Cheverny, complement, p.
19.
F. Tosquelles, "La problematique du pouvoir dans les collectifs de soins psychiatriques," La Nef 281'1year,no. 42,January March,1971:L'Antipsychiatrie,p. 98.
He stated this in an intervention at the University ol Vincennes on 5 February 1971: "Personally, I do not accept the label anti-psychiatrist. " (Personal notes; J. L. )
On the Italian movement, see: [a| F. Basaglia, [1] ed. , Che cos'e la psichiatria? (Turin: Einaudi, 1973); French translation, Qu'esl<e qu la psychiatrie? trans. R. Maggiori (Paris: Presses universitaires de France, 1977); [ii | "L'Istituzione negata. Rapporto da un ospedale psichiatrico"; Vlnslilution en negation. Rapport su Vhopital psychiatrique de Gori^ia; fiii] "Le rapport de Trieste," in Pratiques de lafolie. Pratiques etfolie (Paris: Ed. Solin, 1981) pp. 5 7 0 . On this current, see also: [ b | G. Jervis, "II Mito dell'Antipsichiatna," Quaderni Piacentini, no. 60 61, October 1976; French translation, Le Mythe de I'antipsychiatrie," trans. B. de Freminville (Paris: ? d. Solin, 1977). [c| R. Castel, "Le ville natale de 'Marco Cavallo,' embleme de I'antipsychiatrie," Critique, no. 435 436, August-September 1983, pp. 628-636. More generally, on anti-psychiatry movements in Europe, see [dj Reseau. Alternative a la
psychiatrie. Collectif international (Paris: Union generale d'Edition, 1977).
F. Basaglia, "L'assistance psychiatrique comme probleme anti-institutionnel: une
experience italienne," Information psychiatrique, vol. 47, no. 2, February 1971: "The tolerant institution, the other face of the violent institution, continues to perform its original func tion without changing its strategic and structural meaning, or the games ol power on which it is based. "
F. Basaglia, "Les institutions de la violence," in Vinstitution en negation, p. 137.
The works of English anti-psychiatry began to be translated and known in France follow- ing a colloquium organized in 1967 in Paris by the Federation des groupes d'Etudes et de Recherches institutionnelles (FGERI), to which Cooper and Laing were invited. See [aj
R. Castel, La Gestion des risques. De Vantipsychiatrie a Vapres-psychanalyse, 1 ? "Grandeurs et servitudes contestaires" (Paris: Ed. de Minuit, 1981) pp. 19 33. fb] J. Postel and D. F. Allen, "History and anti-psychiatry in France" in M. Micale and R. Porter, eds. Discovering the History of Psychiatry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994) pp. 384 414. [c) Recherches special issue Enfance alienee, vol. 2, December 1968 in which there are contributions from D. Cooper, "Alienation mentale et alienation sociale" pp. 48-50, and
R. Laing, "Metanoia. Some experiences at Kingsley Hall" pp. 51-57.
"A more radical questioning led some of us to put forward conceptions and procedures that seem to be absolutely opposed to traditional conceptions and procedures, and which can in fact be considered as the germ of an anti-psychiatry" David Cooper, Psychiatrie et Anti-
psychialrie, p. 9. (This passage does not appear in the original English, Psychiatry and Anti-Psychiatry. }
42.
43- 44.
45-
? 46. 47.
R. D. Laing, The Politics of Experience, pp. 105 6; La politique de ['experience, p. 88.
Report on the activity of the Philadelphia Association (1965-1967), quoted in the article by G. Baillon, "Introduction a l'antipsychiatrie," La Nef, 28lh year, no. 42, January May 1971: L'Anti-Psychiatrie, p. 23. This is why, in his contribution, "Histoire de la folie et antipsychi atrie," to the colloquium at Montreal organized by H. Ellenberger on 9 May 1973: "Faul
d interner les psychiatres? "--to which he refers in "Michel Foucault: An Interview by Stephen Riggins" Essential Works of Foucault, vol. 1, pp. 131-132; French translation, "Une interview de Michel Foucault par Stephen Riggins" trans. F. Durand-Bogaert, Dits et Ecrits, vol. 4, pp. 536 537--he could say: "In the form of anti-psychiatry practiced by Laing and Cooper, it is a question of the de medicalization of the space in which madness is pro- duced. Consequently, it is an anti psychiatry in which the power relationship is reduced to zero. This de medicalization implies not only an institutional reorganization of psychiatric establishments; it is undoubtedly more than a simple epistemological break; the question should perhaps be posed more in terms of an ethnological break than o( a political revolution. Maybe it is not just our economic system, or even our present form of rationalism, but the whole of our immense social rationality as it has been woven historically since the Greeks that reluses today to recognize, at the very heart of our society, an experience of madness that may be a test of truth not under the control oi medical power" (typescript p. 19).
See above, lecture of 7 November 1973, pp. 15 16.
E. Goffman, Asylums: Essays on the Social Siluation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates (New York: Doubleday, 1961); French translation, Asiles: Etudes sur la condition sociale des malades mentaux et autres reclus, trans. L. and Cl. Laine, wilh Preface by R. Castel (Paris: ? d. de Minuit, 1968). See M. Foucault |i| "La verite et les formes juridiques"; pp. 611 612; "Truth and Juridical Forms" pp. 75 76. [iij "Foucault Examines Reason in Service of State Power" an interview with M. Dillon in Campus Report, 12th Year, no. 6, October 1979, pp. 5-6; French translation, "Foucault etudie la raison d'Etat" trans. F. Durand-Bogaert, Dits et Ecrits,vol. 3, pp. 802-803. fiii] "Foucault Examines Reason in Service of State Power" The Three Penny Review, 1st Year, no. 1, 1980, pp. 4 5; French translation, "Foucault Etudie la raison d'Etat trans. F. Durand-Bogaert, Dits et Ecrits, vol. 4, p. 38 (this is a modified version o( the previous reference), and [IV]"Space, Knowledge, and Power" an interview with P. Rabinow, in Essential Works of Foucault, 3, pp. 356-357; French translation, "Espace, savoir et pouvoir" trans. F. Durand-Bogaert, Dits et Ecrits, vol. 4, p. 277. E. Goffman, Asylums, p. 4.
See above, "Course summary," p. 339.
See above, lecture of 12 December 1973, p. 132.
"Foucault Examines Reason in Service of State Power," pp. 4-5; "Foucault Etudie la raison d'Etat;' p. 38.
The battle of Henri Ey (1900-1977) to maintain the "specificity" of psychiatry against psychoanalysis and against biological and socio-political temptations, testifies to this, as does the appearance of a collection edited by F. Caroli entitled, precisely, Specificile de la
psychiatrie (Paris: Masson, 1980).
David Cooper, Psychiatry and Anti-Psychiatry: "In so far as psychiatry represents the interests or pretended interests of the sane ones, we may discover that, in fact, violence in psychiatry is pre eminently the violence of psychiatry" p. 14.
See above, note 31.
See above, lecture ol 6 February 1974, p. 304 sq.
See above, "Course summary" p. 342.
"Histoire de la folie et antipsychiairie" (typescript) p. 12. Summarized with some changes in the "Course summary. "
Ibid.
"Le grand enfermemeni" Dits et Ecrits, vol. 2, p. 301.
48. 49.
50. 51. 52. 53-
54.
55-
56. 57. 58. 59.
60. 61.
Course Context 367
? Ackerknecht, Erwin Heinz 198, 262, 364 Adams, R. A. 324
Adnes, Andre 36
Alembertjean Le Rond d' 259
Alencon, Edouard d' 8 9 Alexander IV (pope) 257 Algarron, Jacques 351 Alleau, Rene 258
Allen, David F. 366
Althusser, Louis 18
Amandry, Pierre 260
Amard, Louis Victor Frederic 169 Ame, Charles Francois (patient) 293 Arnauld, Antoine 140
Auenbrugger, Leopold 324 Augustine, Aurelius Augustinus
(saint) 88
Augustine (patient) 331 Ayme,Jean 366 AymenJ. B. 259
Azam, Paul 294
Babinski, Joseph Francois Felix 142, 323, 332-33, 342
Baillarger, Jules Gabriel Francois 197, 267, 289, 292, 325, 326
Baillon, Guy 367
Balard, Antoine Jerome 291 Ballet, Gilbert 231
Balvet, Paul 196
Barbaroux, N. 90
Barker, John 259
Barnes, Mary 31-32, 37, 347 Basaglia, Franco 341, 345, 347, 357,
365, 366
Baudin, Louis 89
Bayard, Henri Louis 141, I95
Bayle, Antoine Laurent Jesse 141, 263, 267, 289, 306, 326
Bayle, Gaspard Laurent 198,199 Beauchesne, H. 227
Beaudouin, Henri 59
Beccaria, Cesare 17
Becher, Hubert 8 9
Belhomme, Jacques Etienne 205-6, 224, 225,
226
Belloc, Hippolyte 156,171,192
Bentham, Jeremy 41,60, 73-79, 90, 91, 93,
102-3,106
Bergboff, Emanuel 259
Berillon, Edgar 294
Berke, Joe 31-32, 37, 347
Berliere, Ursmer 88
Bernard, Claude 142, 279, 291
Bernardin, Alexandre Edme Maurice 145, 149,
195
Bernbeim, Hippolyte 316, 318, 331, 341 Berthier, Pierre 100, 117, 118
Berthold de Calabre 8 9
Bertrand, Alexandre 255
Bessejean Martial 8 8 , 8 9
Bichat, Marie Francois Xavier 188, 198, 298,
299, 302, 303, 323, 324, 336
Binet, Alfred 61
Bini, Lucio 195
Binswanger, Ludwig 364
Bixler, Elizabetb S. 196
Blanche, Esprit Sylvestre 110, 112, 113, 120-21,
169
Bleandonu, Gerard 196 Boerhaave, Hermann 260 Boisseau, Edmund 142, 330 Boissier de Sauvages, Francois 225 Bollotte, Gustave 117
INDEX OF NAMES
? 370 INDEX OF NAMES
Bongert, Yvonne 257
Bonnafe, Lucien 59, 264, 351, 352, 355, 364,
365, 366
Bordeu, Theophile 259
Bonssov, Vladimir 365
Borneman, Ernst 170
Borromeo, Carlo (saint) 193
Bouchardeau, G. 230
Bouche-Leclercq, Auguste 260
Boucher, Louis 194
Bouchet, Camille 168, 197
Boukovski, Wladimir 365
Bourgey, Louis 259
Bourgin, Georges 90
Bourneville, Desire Magliore 142, 199, 217-18,
220-21, 224, 225, 227, 228, 229, 230, 318,
331
BousquetJ. B. E. 292
Bouzon, Jean 91
Braguette (the widow Brouillard, called)
(patient) 136-37, 142, 285, 293 Braid, James 285-86, 294-95 Braun, Lucien 258
Brauner, Alfred 227
Bredero, Adriaan Hendrik 88
Briand, Marcel 228
Brierre de Boismont, Alexandre Jacques
Francois 109, 112-14, 118, 120, 121,169 Briftaut, Jean Baptiste Lodois 325
Briquet, Paul 332
Broca, Pierre Paul 285-86, 294, 300-3, 324-25 Brochin, Hippolyte 168, 255
Brouardel, Paul 332 Broussais, Francois 336, 349 BroussardJ. 90
Bru, Paul 194
Brucker, Joseph
Bruno, Giordano 258 Bruttin,Jean Marie 327 Buntz, Herwig 258 Burckhardt, Titus 258 Burdin, Claude 293
Burton, Marc 365
Bus, Cesar de 90
Butler, Cuthbert 88
Buvat Pochon, Christine 169
Caro, Elme Marie 193
Caron, Michel 258
Castel, Robert 18, 36, 87,199, 229, 263, 347,
366, 367
Cele, Jean 6 0
Celina (patient) 320, 332
Cerise, Laurent Alexis Philibert 229, 325 Cerletti, Ugo 195
Chagny, Andre 194
Chantraine, Pierre 255, 259
Chaptal, Jean Antoine, The Count ol
Chanteloup 194
Charcotjean-Martin 98, 136-37, 142, 202,
224, 264, 269, 288, 297-98, 308-32,
339-43, 360, 361
Charlesworth, Edward 119
Chassaigne, Marc 60
Chastenet, Armand Marc Jacques de, marquis
de Puysegur 293
Christian,Jules 289
Cindadjean 194
Cochin, Austin 91, 228, 229 Cochin, Jean Denys Marie 228, 229 Cognet, Louis 60
Condillac, Etienne Bonnot de 78, 91 Conollyjohn 119
Cooper, David 341, 345, 347, 358, 365,
366, 367
Copernicus, Nicolaus 138
Corvisart des Marets,Jean Nicolas 324 Coulmiers, Francois de 194
Cousin, Patrice 88
Couteaux,J. 194
Cox, Joseph Mason 33, 37,129, 130, 132, 137,
140, 169
Cranefield, Paul 225 Cullen, William 224, 326
Daquin, Joseph 120, 168, 224, 225 Daremberg, Charles Victor 259, 260, 261 Darwin, Charles Robert 120, 223
Darwin, Erasmus 169
Daumezon, Georges 59, 117, 196, 264 Davaine, Casimir Joseph 226
Davenne, Henri Jean Baptiste 91, 226, 227,
228, 229, 230
Dechambre, Amedee 142, 291 Defert, Daniel 37, 256, 364 Defradas,Jean 2 6 0
Dehaussy, Jacques 91 Dehove,Gerard 90
Dejerine, Joseph Jules 230, 290, 327
Caire, Michel 196
Calmeil, Louis Florentin 226, Canguilhem, Georges 202, 224 Canivez,Joseph-Marie 88 Caquot, Andre 260
8 9 , 9 0
263
? Delasiauve, Louis 329
Ddaye, Jean Baptiste 141, 263, 326 Delcourt, Marie 255
Deleuze, Gilles 87
Delsaut, Pierre Joseph 1 9 8 Demersay, Alfred 89, 9 0
Demetz, Frederic Auguste 91 Derrida, Jacques 292
Desaive,Jean Paul 2 6 2
Descartes, Rene 27, 37, 130, 140,
283, 292
Detienne, Marcel 256
Devernoix, Pierre 263
Dewhurst, Kenneth 2 5 9
Diderot, Denis 259
Dolleans, lidouard 9 0
Doncoeur, R. P. 193
Doutrehente, Georges 290
Dowbiggin, Ian Robert 231
Dreylus, Ferdinand 91
Dubois, Jean 325
Dubois, Frederic (called Dubois d'Amiens)
293, 326
Dubuisson (Jean Baptiste Theophile
Jacquelin) 204, 211; . vee Jacquelin Dubuisson Dubuisson, Paul. D . 264
Duchenne, Cuillaume Benjamin Amand, called
de Boulogne 288, 295, 300-1, 311-12, 323,
324, 325
Dudon, Paul 193
Ducpetiaux, Fdouard 91
Dullinjacalyn 199
Dupin, Flenri262
Dupotet de Sennevoy, Jules 142, 255, 293 Dupuy,J. Marc 117
Dupre (patient) 144-53, 157-59, 161-64, 167,
169, 170, 171, 176, 290
Durand, Jean Pierre, called Durand de Gros
(aliasJoseph Philips) 286-87, 294 Duval, Andre 8 8
F. delstein, Ludwig 258
Einstein, Albeit 138
FJiade, Mircea 258
Fllenberger, Henri F. 264, 293, 361, 367 Erichsen,John Eric 330
E.
smein, Adhemar 257
Esquirol,Jean Etienne Dominique 263, 272,
279, 282, 289, 290, 291-92, 293, 326, 331,
338-40, 344, 345, 347, 349, 355-56, 3 6 6 Fsterson, Aaron 358
Index of Names 371 Ewald, Francois 37, 364
Ey, Henri 292, 326, 367
Faber, Knud 259
Fainberg, Victor 365
Falretjean-Pierre 117-18,119,141,152,168,170,
186-87,197,198,199, 212, 227, 228, 263, 290 Falret, Jules Philippe 230, 307, 321, 327, 332 Fassbinder, Maria 9 0
Fere, Charles 142, 230, 328
Fernald, Walter 213, 229
Ferrus, Guillaume Marie Andre 120, 153-54,
170, 197, 199, 212, 228, 230, 326 Fiorelli, Pieio 258
Fischer Homberger, Esther 330 Flaceliere, Robert 255, 2 6 0
Fleury, Louis Joseph Desire 327
Fodere, Francois Emmanuel 2, 3-4, 7, 15, 17, 29,
37, 94, 98,117,168, 224, 331 Foissac, Pierre 293
Foil in, Eugene Francois 294 Fonssagnves,Jean Baptiste 168 Fontana, Alessandro 264 Fontanille, Raphael 264 Fournet, Jules 108-9, 118, 120 Fournier, Allred 2 8 9
Foville, Achille (de) 141, 226, 263, 326, 327 Franchi,Jean 194
Francis ol Assisi (saint) 8 9
Francis de Sales (saint) 193
Frederick II 48
Freud, Sigmund 98, 138, 167, 170, 221,231,
292, 308, 321-22, 327, 332, 349 Funck-Brentano, Frantz 194
Caillac, Henri 90, 91
Galbraith, Georgina R. 8 8
Galen (Claudius Galenus) 245, 259, 261 Ganzenmuller, Wilhelm 258
Garrabe, Jean 196
Garrison, Fielding Hudson295
Gaspann, Adrien, comte de 36
Gastaldy, Joseph 194
Caudemet,Jean 257
Gaulres, MJ. 61, 89, 231
Gauthier, Aubin 142, 255, 329
Genevieve (patient) 322, 332
Genii Perrin, Georges 231
Gentis, Roger 353, 365
George III, King 20-21, 25, 27, 29, 31, 32, 33,
36, 40, 41, 360
? 372 INDEX OF NAMES
Georget, Etiennejean 17, 28, 29, 37, 136, 141,
142,148,170, 195, 224, 225, 226, 255, 262,
263, 285, 293, 325, 331
Gerdy, P. N. 326
Gerspach, Edouard 60
Gicklhorn, Josef 332
Gicklhorn, Renee 332
Girard de Cailleux, Henri 100, 118, 154, 169,
171, 182, 196
Giraudy, Charles Francois Simon
194, 197
Glotz, Gustave 257
Goffman, Erving 359-60, 367
Gontard, Maurice 228
Goubert, Pierre 262
Gralien, Badin 89
Greenwood, Major 262
Gregory IX (pope) 257
Griesinger, Wilhelm 195, 289, 290, 326 Grigorenko, Piotr 365
Grmeck, Mirko Drazen 199
Groote, Gerard 59-60, 67
Guattari, Felix 87, 357
Guesstel, Charles 171
Guillain, Georges 194, 308, 327 Guillemaud, Claude 329
Guilleret 119
Guillermou, Alain 89
Guilly, Paul 295
Guiraud,Jean 258
Guislain, Joseph 29, 37, 117, 119, 120, 168,
169, 195
Guizot, Francois Pierre Guillaume 212, 228 Guzman, Dominique de 88
Habill (patient) 329
Hack Tuke, Daniel 330
Flalliday, William Reginald 260 Hamelin, G. 259
Ilamon, Georges 329
Hamoniaux, M. 9 0
Ilannaway, Caroline 262
Haslam, John 3, 9, 17, 29, 37, 119 Flatzleld, Henri 329
Haussmann, Georges F_ugene, Baron
170, 197
Haymaker, Webb 324 Hchert (patient) 293
1 Iecaen, Henri 325 Hecquet, Philippe 168 Heidegger, Martin 255-56
Helvetius, Claude Arien 78, 91 Helyot, R. P. 88-89, 90
Flermans, Francis 89
Hippocrates 242, 245, 255, 258-59,
260-61
Hobbes, Thomas 57, 61 Hoffbauer. Johann Christoph 263, 338 Hoffmann, Friedrich 248, 260, 261 Honorius 111 (pope) 88
Huard, Pierre 199
Hunter, Richard 17, 36
Husserl, Edmund 255
Husson, Bernard 258
Husson, Henri Marie 255
Hutin, Serge 258
Huvelin, Henri 193
Hyma, Albert 60
Ignatius Loyola (saint) 89, 193 llberg, Johannes 261
Imbault-Huart, Marie Jose 199, 262 Innocent IV (pope) 89, 257
Itard, Jean Marc Gaspard 211, 226-27, 263
Jacquelin Dubuisson, Jean Baptiste Theophile 204, 225, 226
Janet, Pierre 349
Jean Nesmy, Claude 88 Jervis, Giovanni 366 Joeger, Murielle 262 Joly, Robert 258
Joos, Paul 255
Jouanna, Jacques 258 JuchetJ. 196-97
Kanner, Leo 225
Kant, Immanuel 291 Kantorowicz, Ernst 45, 60, 91 Kaplan, Steven 90
Kepler, Johannes 138
King, Lester Snow 225, 259, 26t) Knowles, David 88
Koechlin, Philippe 117
Koyre, Alexandre 89
Kraepelin, Emile 339
Kraft, Ivol 229
Kucharski, Paul 255
Labatt, Hamilton 119 Labbe, Denise 351 Labitte, Gustave 140
? Laennec, Rene Theophile Hyacinthe 198-99, 298-99, 302-3, 323, 324
Latontaine, Charles 294
Lailler (pharmacist) 255
Laine, Tony 352, 365
Laing, Ronald D. 341, 358, 365, 366, 367 Laingui, Andre 117
Lallemand, Leon 91
La Mettriejulien Offray de 260, 329 Lancelot, Claude 140
Landrc-Beauvais, Augustin Jacob 293 Laurent, Armand 141, 291, 330
Lauzier,Jean 59
Lea, Henry Charles 89, 257-58, 330
Lear, King 21, 36; see Shakespeare
Leblanc, Sebastien 194
Leborgne (patient) 324
Le Breton, Jacques 120
Lecler, Joseph 88
Leclercq, Henri 258
Le Filliatre, Gustave 289
Le Gauley, Guy 196, 231
Le Goff, Jacques 8 9
Legrain, Paul Maurice 230
Legrand du Saulle, Henri 117, 168, 329
Le Guillant, Louis 264
Leibovici, Marcel 2 6 0
Lekai, Louis Julius 88
Le Logeais (patient) 331
Lelut, Louis Francisque 226, 326
Le Paulmier, Claude Stephen 224
Le Roy Ladune, Emmanuel 262
Leuret, Francois 18, 31, 37, 107, 117, 120, 130,
140,144,145-46, 148, 149-53, 157-64,166, 169-71, 174, 176-77,180,184,193, 194,195, 197, 215, 226, 262, 277, 290, 339
Levy,Jean Philippe 257 Libert, Lucien 117 Lichtenthaeler, Charles 258 Liebig,Justus 255
Littre, Emile 255, 258, 327 Longet, Francois Achille 325 Lourdaux, Willem 6 0 Lubimov, Alexei 224
Lucas, Charles Jean Marie 9 0 Lugon, Clovis 9 0
Macalpine, Ida 36
MacPherson, Crawlord Brough 61 Magendie, Francois 324
Magnan, Valentin 119, 230, 326
Mahnjean Berthold 88
Maisonneuve, Henri 258
Malson, Lucien 227
Mandonnet, Pierre 88
Marc, Charles Chretien Henri 227, 263, 264,
291
Margolin, Jean Claude 258
Marie, Pierre 325, 330
Marin, Louis 140
Marindaz, Georges 194
Marivaux, Pierre Carlet de Chamblain de 79,
91
Martel. Jean Georges Hippolyte 196 MartinJ. G. G. 227
Mason Cox see Cox
Masse, L. 262
Mathieu, Paul 194
Matton, Sylvain 258
Maury, Alfred 292
Maxwell, James Clerk 138
Meduna, Laszlo von 195
Mesmer, Antonius 294
Meyer, Jean 262
Mialle, Simon 293
Micale, Mark 366
Michea, Claude Francois 168, 289, 326 Michel, Albert 257
Michelet, Marcel 6 0
Mignont, Henri 264
Millepierres, Francois 261
Mir, Gabriel Codina 60
Moliere, Jean Baptiste Poquelin 245, 261 Monfalcon, Jean Baptiste 91
Monneret, Edouard 327
Monteggia, Giovanni Battista 291 Monval,Jean 194
Moore, Stanlord 289
Moorman, John 89
Moreau de Tours, Joseph Jacques 168, 197,
255, 278-83, 290-93, 326
Moreau de Tours, Paul 224
Morel, Benedict Augustin 119, 120, 195, 223,
230,278,290,291
Muel, Francine 61
Miiller, Charles 36
Muraton, Lodovic Antonio 89 Myrvold, Renate 225
Nadaud, Martin 329 Newton, Isaac 78 Nicole, Pierre 140
Index of Names 373
? 37'i INDEX OF NAMES
Noguchi, Hideyo 289 Nottarp, Hermann 257 Nutton, Vivian 261 Nyllelerjohann Rudolf
120
Rappard, Philippe 366
Rapin, Georges 351
Raynier, Julien 59
Recamier, Joseph 255
Rech de Montpellier, Armand Philippe
Hippolyte 169
Reisseisen, Francois Daniel 263 Renaudin, Louis Francois Emile 326
Rey, Philippe 213, 228
Richard, Jean Pierre 329
Ric hard III 21;see Shakespeare
Richer, Marie Louis Pierre 328
Riese, Wallher 295
Ritti, Antoine 225, 289
Riviere, Pierre 263-64, 272, 290
Robert de Molesmes (saint) 88
Robin, Charles Philippe Ml
Roc hard, Jules Eugene 198
Rochemonteix, Camilie de 60
Rollet, Claude 91
Roosen Runge, Heinz 258
Rosen, George 262
Rostan, Louis Leon 141, 142, 255, 293, 326 Rot hschuh, Karl E. 2 6 0
Rouhier, Eugene 119
Roux, Georges 255
Rover Collard, Antoine Athanase 263 Rucart, Marc 59
Sackler, Arthur M. 195
Sade, Donatien Alplionse Francois, marquis de
17
Sagar, Jean Michel 224
Saint Yves, Isabelle 227
Samson, Catherine (patient) 255, 293
Sauzet, Marc 9 0
Schiller, Francis 324
Schipperges, Heinrich 258
Seguin, Onesime Edouard 205, 207-12, 214-17,
221,225,226-27, 228,229 Semelaigne, Rene 120, 196, 197 Senes, V. 329
Serieux, Paul 117
Servan,Joseph Michel Antoine 17, 40, 59 Sessevalle, Francois de 8 9
Sevest re, Pierre 194
Shakespeare, William 36
Sicard, R. A. 227 Simon, Nadine 194 Simon, Theodore 61 Socrates 255 Soubeiran, Eugene 255
Obolensky, Dimitri 88 CEchslin, R. L. 8 8
Olier, Jean Jacques 193 Olphe Galliard, Michel 193 Oppenheim, Hermann 330 Orcibaljean 89
Ouryjean 357, 366
Owen, Alan Robert George 329
Pacaut, Marcel 88
Page, Herbert William 330
Parchappe de Vinay, Jean Baptiste Maximien
182, 196, 199, 214, 229, 326
Parent de Curzon, F. mmanuel 91
Parigot,J. 120
Parmemdes 255
Pasteur, Louis 336-37, 340, 341-42
Paul 111(pope) 89
Paumelle, Philippe
Peisse, Louis 294
Pelicier, Yves 227
Penot, Achille9l
Peter,Jean Pierre 262
Petit, Marc Antoine 198
Petronille (patient) 136
Philips, Joseph 294; see also Durand Pinel,Jean Pierre Casimir 109, 120
Pinel, Philippe 2, 3, 6, 8, 9-10, 14-15, 17-18,
19-20, 23, 25-29, 36-37, 40, 94,105,108, 109, 118, 120, 129-30, 132, 137,140, 141, 146, I68,169,174,183-84,193-94,196-97, 204, 211, 225-26, 279, 283, 289, 293, 308, 327
Pinel, Scipion 36
Plato 236, 255-56
Ploss, F. mil Ernst 258
Pohlenz, Max 258
Portalis, Jean Etienne Mane 117 Porter, Roy 366
Postel, Jacques 56, 197, 366
Pottet, Eugene 194
Pussinjean Baptiste 10, 183, 196-97 Puysegur see Chaste net
Quetel, Claude 168
Race, Victor ( patient) 293 Ranee, abbot ol 193
264
? Souques, Alexandre Achille Cyprien 324, Spinoza, Baruch 291
Strauss, Charles 194
Surzur. Jean Marcel Joseph 194 Sydenham, Thomas 168, 242, 258-60 Szasz, Thomas 264, 345, 347
Tanon, Celestin Louis 257-58
Taylor, Frank Sherwood
Terme, Jean Francois 91
Temkin, Owsei 198, 325
Thomas a Kempis 6 0
Thomsen, R. 330
Thuillier, Guy 227
Torrubia, Horace 366
Tosquelles, Francois 264, 357, 366 Toulouse, Edouard 59
Tourdes, Gabriel 142, 330 Trelat, Ulysse 169
Trenel, Marc 117
Trilhe, Robert 88 Tschudy, Raymond
Tuke, Samuel 119
Tuke, William 17, 119
Tiirgot, Anne Robert Jacques, Baron of
L'Aulne 262
Vacandard, Elphcge 257-58 Valentin, Louis 195
Vallery Radot, Rene 121 Valous, Guy de 88
Van Brock, Nadia 259
Van Helmont,Jean Baptiste 168
Van Ruysbroek, Johannes 59, 8 9
Veitri, Ilza 259
Velpeau, Alfred Armand Louis Marie 294 Vernant,Jean Pierre 260
Vernet, Felix 89
Viala, Casimir Jean 91
Vibert, Charles 330
Vicaire, Marie I lumbert
Vie, Jacques 194, 225
Victor, de PAveyron 227
Vigouroux, Auguste 264
Vincent, Francis 193
Vincent de Paul (saint) 193, 194 Vinchon,Jean 225
Vlastos, Gregory 255
Voisin, Auguste 119, 290
Voisin, Felix 141, 211, 213, 220, 227-28, 230, 263
Walsh, Jean 261
Watterwille, Adolphe de 91
Werner, Ernst 8 8
Willis, Francis 20, 22, 23, 27, 36, 40 Willis, Thomas 224-25
Wiriot, Mireille 198
Woillez, Eugene Joseph 140
Yates, Frances Amelia 258
Zaloszyc, Armand 230 Zazzo, Rene 61, 225 Zimmerman, B. 89
8 8
258
8 8
Index of Names 375
? Abnormality 115, 124, 210-11, 221-23, 272
condition of possibility of madness 272
economic problem of cost of 220 Alienation, mental 214
A. L. J. Bayle 289, 326
Esquirol 224
Fournet 120
Parchappe de Vinay 214 Pinel 226, 293
Amentia (Sagar) 224, 225
Amentia morosis (Boissier de Sauvages)
225
Amyl nitrate (Balard) 278, 291 Analysis
of power, discursive 13
of representations 40
Anamnesis 176, 177, 186, 187, 192, 203,
270, 362
Anesthesia, Hemianaesthesia (Charcot) 309,
311
Anomie of disciplinary systems 54 Antipsychiatry/ic 13, 39, 254, 341,
342, 344-47, 350; see also Hysteric;
Schizophrenia
Aphasia 300, 301, 303, 304; see also Broca
anarthria 303, 325 Apparatuses (clispositifs)
disciplinary 63
neurological 303, 311
of power 350
of sovereignty 52, 64-65
of the statement of truth 157
Archeology of knowledge 238-39, 256 Architecture 102, 127, 182, 365; see also
Panopticon
eighteenth century hospital 346
Assimilation ol mad - primitive - delinquent 109
Asylum(s)
administration of 182
and the family 94, 97
field of battle 7
medically demarcated space 173
site of confrontation between the doctor's will
and madness as disturbed will 339
site of formation of a discourse ol truth 93 game of reality in 175
general ritual of 146
Asylum tautology 165-66, 175 Autobiographical account 203
element ol psychiatric and criminological practice 158
Behavior
automatic or reflex 301 complex 3 0 0
voluntary 301
Biology 11, 295
evolutionary 222-23
Pasteurian and transformation of the hospital
336-37 Body
anatomical-pathological 316 neurological 314, 323 family's 271
psychiatrist's 4
sexual 323
Body power, synaptic contact 40-41 Braidism 285-86, 294, 295; see also Braid
Ceremonies of deposition 20 Childhood
abnormal 221-22,
memories of 125, 158, 161, 166, 271, 318
origin of mental illness 202
INDEX OF NOTIONS
? Children
mad 202-3, 221-22, 224
psychiatrization of abnormal and idiot 212,
214, 217, 227-30 Chloroform 234, 235, 255, 278
Classification
psychiatric nosological, practical destination
of 128, 133
or taxonomy as general form of empirical
knowledge in classical age 72-73 Clinic, neurological 298
Clinical presentation
constitutive ritual ol psychiatrist's medical
power 187
theory of (Falret) 186
Clinics (maisons cle sante) 110, 112-16 Colonies, asylum 166
Colonization
submission to force 8
classical conception 129, 144 labyrinth ol fictional verification 35
Degeneration (Morel) 223, 230 Delinquents, organization into an
"underworld" 54
Delirium 28, 34-35,100-1,131-32, 147-51,154,
163-64,173-74, 204-7, 322, 338
hypochondriacal 2 6 6
theme of omnipotence in 147-49
Dementia 180,195, 204-7, 225, 226, 253, 267,
306, 326
illness of old age (according to Belhomme) 225
absolute deprivation of reason (according to Daquin) 225
"innate dementia" (Cullen) 224 Dependence 8, 80,177,178 Depsychiatrization; see also psychoanalysis
"psychiatry ol zero production" 342 disconnection ol medical power and all the
specilic ellects ol asylum space 343 re-establishment of medical power in its
correct eflectiveness 342 Development, mental
halted (Seguin) 207; see also Idiocy retarded (Seguin) 205, 207, 210; see also
Retardation, mental Diagnosis
absolute 266-67, 304, 306, 308, 311
differential 251, 265, 266, 304-10, 315, 321 "Direction" 179, 185, 193
spiritual 174, 193
Discipline 2, 25, 29, 41, 46-51, 53-57, 65, 70,
73, 82, 85-87, 97,112,115,123-25, 132,155, 181,188, 202, 235, 249, 252-53, 276, 335, 343
asylum discipline as lorce and lorm of reality
73, 86,124,132,155,181, 249, 253 disciplines as techniques for the distribu
tion ol bodies, individuals, time, and
force of work 73
Discourse 39, 58, 164-67, 320, 357
anatomical or physio pathological 133 clinical, classilicatory or nosological 133-34 psychiatric 6, 7, 41
of the hysteric 305
ol truth 10, 13, 26, 27, 32, 40, 87, 93-94,
101, 135, 362 Dispositions, tactical 359
Dissimulation 221, 266
pedagogical, ol youth
of idiocy 211-12
6 6 - 6 8
ol vagabonds, beggars, nomads, delinquents, and prostitutes 70
within psychiatric space 211-12 Communities
lay 41
religious 41, 64, 65 Conlession
practice of 177, 270
and ordeal test ol truth 140, 234, 257 Conlinement (internement)
at beginning ol nineteenth century 50
1838 law 59, 94, 95, 212, 219
Conlinement (renfermemenl) in the classical age
70, 95
Constraint, instruments ol physical 104 Convulsions 306-7, 310, 314
Corporal apparatuses 105
extracting truth 105 marking, branding 105 security and testing 105
Crime, madness and 249 Criminology 86, 335 Crisis
hysterical 274, 304
intrinsic leature ol illness 243
moment ol therapeutic intervention 244 suppression ol in medicine and psychiatry 249 test ol reality 268
technique ol as technique ol test 243-44
Cure(s) 3, 8, 11, 26, 29, 101-2,112-13,131-33,
144,160-64,166, 178-79,188, 236, 283, 356
scene ol conlronlation 1C)
Index of Notions 377
? 378 INDEX OF NOTIONS
Doctor(s)
producer of truth of illness 342, 361 asylum doctor as master of madness 264,
340, 361
dependence of patient on 177
questioning ot power of since end of nine
teenth century 346
Dream 281-83, 291, 292; see also Drugs,
Madness Drugs
experience of drugs as "internal grasp" of madness 281
instruments ol discipline 277
means to reveal primordial seat ol madness
280
medico-legal use of 278
Moreau de Tours 168, 255, 278-79, 281-83
Electroshock 181, 195
Epilepsy 305, 310, 320-21, 325, 328, 340 Ergot herapy 127
Error
criterion ot madness 7
of the mad person 27, 130-31 Ether, etherisation 278, 291 Exercise(s)
ascetic 41, 67
corporal 217
Expertise, medico legal 346, 351
Falsehood 136, 137,138,139, 191
Family
body of, as material substratum ol madness
271
cell of sovereignty 82, 84
disciplining of 82, 83, 115, 128, 202 tamilialization of, and in, therapeutic milieu
110, 114
model for psychiatric practice 16, 26,112, 127 support for abnormality and madness 223 switch-point for disciplinary systems 81-82
Faradization, localized (Duchenne de Boulogne) 300, 324
Feeble minded (Seguin) 54, 115, 191 Force, insurrection ot 7, 8
Freedom, deprivation of 155
Frenzy (Jureur) 19, 117, 204, 224 "Functional mannequin"
maneuver of 311 and hypnosis 315
"Furieux" 7, 117
Genealogy ol knowledge (connaissance)
239, 346
Hallucination 7, 28, 33, 9 9 , 1 0 0 , 267, 274, 278, 345
fixed ideas (Labitte) 128, 280 Hashish 234
intoxication and mechanisms of questioning 278-84
therapy (Moreau de Tours) 278 Heredity
pathological 270
predispositions 271, 275, 289 History
of disciplinary apparatuses (dispositifs) 63 ot psychiatry 12, 26, 31, 32, 133, 135, 136,
138, 139, 177, 185, 202, 220, 234, 269,
282, 350
of truth 235,237,238 Hospital
curing machine 101-2
site ol knowledge and ot realization ot
illness 252
space tor realization ot madness 252
Humanism, humanist 14, 29
Hypnosis 31, 234, 270, 277, 284, 285-88,
312-13, 314, 316, 318, 322
Durand de Gros 287 suggestion 312, 340 trauma 314, 317-18
Hypochondria 266, 306, 327 Hypotaxic state (Durand de Gros)
286, 294
Hysteria 26, 98, 135,136, 168,199, 202, 233,
254, 266, 269, 304, 306, 308, 309, 513,
314, 321-22, 323, 340, 341; see also Charcot asylum 138
natural 304-5, 312
struggle against psychiatric power 264 battle of 308
codilication of symptoms and epilepsy 310, 313
stigmata 3 0 9 Hysteric(s)
perfect patient 341
first, true militant ol antipsychiatry 254 Hystero epilepsy (Charcot) 325,
328, 330
? Iconography of power 23
Idiocy, idiots, idiotism 203-14, 221; sec a/so
Alienation, mental
Esquirol and Belhomme 224, 225, 226 Jacquelin Dubuisson 211
Pinel 211
Seguin 208, 225, 227
as disability, monstrosity, and non illness
207
annexation by psychiatric power 219 theoretical specification 219
Illness(es)
mental and "true" 305
ol dillerenttal diagnosis and of absolute
diagnosis 266-67, 304, M)6, 308, 311 economic problem ol pro! it lrom 313 pleasure and 162-66
Imbecility 203-5, 211, 214
Dac]iiin 1()8
error that has become obnubilation 204
Individual
disciplinary 56, 57, 58 juridical 57, 58 psychological 85
Individualization 15, 45, 54-56, 6 9 , 75, 78, 8 0 , 86,103, 148, 359
schematic, administrative, and centralized
49, 52
Ingenii Lmbecillitas (Boissier de Sauvages) 225 Inquiries 212-13
Instinct; see also Idiocy (Seguin)
Seguin 221
the will not to will 215 lnstitution(s); see also Panopticon
asylum, psychiatric 35, 87, 350, 352, 353, 355, 357-60
analysis ol 33
Insurrection ol subjugated knowledge 353 Interdiction 94-96, 355
Judgement, classical conception ol 131
Knowledge (savon^; see also Power knowledge medical 2, 3, 5, 11, 28, 107, 166, 179, 191,
192, 235, 251, 277, 286
psychiatric 4, 14, 96, 128, 144, 181,183,188,
233, 250, 251, 308, 350, 354, 355 scientilic 134, 138, 235, 245, 340
ol the individual 78
tokens ol 235
Language, re use ol 149 Laudanum 143, 168, 181, 234, 277 Lies (see lalsehood) 191, 327, 332 Lypemania (Esquirol) 152, 180,
195, 206
Macrophysics ol sovereignty 27 Madman, stupid (Daquin) 224 Madness
assertion ol omnipotence 147-48 original experience of "true man" 354 mental illness 306, 308, 346, 354 neurological lesions 133 demedicalization of 346
etiology 133
reality ol non reality of 177
Magnetism
adjunct of doctor's physical power 284 and crisis 284
Mania 2, 7, 180, 195, 204, 206,
266, 283
without delirium 7 Medication
physical or physiological 143
punishment and 180-81 Medicine
private practice/consultation 202, 245, 343 clinical, as epistemological model of medical
truth 11 statistical 248
autonomization and institutionalization of mental medicine 355
Melancholy 8, 101, 103, 204, 266 Mesmerism 284-85, 294 Microphysics
of bodies 14, 362
ol power 16, 33, 35, 82, 36O
Military service 81, 115, 135
Money 24,145,152-53, 155, 156,177 Money delecation relation (Leuret) 153,
156, 170
Monomania 8, 100, 104, 128, 180, 201, 206,
249, 272
homicidal 195, 264 "Moral treatment"
as therapeutic process 9
unacceptabilily ol desire as element ol I76 game ol reality in 175
and asylum apparatus (disposi'lif) 151
and proto psychiatric scenes }1
Index of Notions 379
? 380 INDEX OF NOTIONS
Nature, therapeutic site of madness in classical age 338
Need(s), management ol 152 Neurology
analysis ol intentional attitude 302
study ol synergies 301
Neuropathology 191, 298, 300, 302, 314, 323 Neuroses
disturbance ol relational I unctions 327 pathological consecration ol thanks to dil
ferential diagnosis 308 sexual component ol 307
"No restraint" (Conolly) 104-6, 119, 154 Normalization 55, 57, 86, 350; see also
Psychiatric knowledge
Objectivity, psychiatric, asylum order as condition ol 6
Omnivisibility 48; see also Panopticon Opium 168, 234, 235, 278, 291
opiates 143, 168, 277
Order, disciplinary asylums, workshops,
barracks, schools, monasteries 3, 47, 8 0 ,
107, 129, 178
Orphanages 74, 84, 178
"Orthopedics" (Durand de Gros) 286, 344
mental 31
psychological and moral 8, 108, 287 Orthophrenia (F. Voisin) 211, 213
Panopticon/panoptic; see also Architecture; Omnivisibility; Bentham
intensifier ol force 74
model for any institution 73-74
power with materiality of 77
Paralysis, general 133, 249, 266-67, 289, 300;
see also Syphilis; Baillarger; A. L. J. Bayle; Fournier
as "good illness" 306
Pathological anatomy 134, 141, 188, 221, 242, 248-50, 263, 265, 267, 271, 275, 287-88, 297-99, 300, 306
of mental illness 165, 179-80
Pedagogy 41, 67-68, 86, 97, 124, 239, 247
as "therapy" lor idiocy and mental retarda
tion 190, 192, 210 of deal mutes 212
Physiology
experimental 279
nervous phy. ol madness 145
Pithiatism(Babinski) 332-33, 342
Power
analytics ol 13
imbalance of in psychiatric treatment 146,
148, 149
analysis of in terms of technology, and
strategy and tactics 13-14, 177, 351 relations as a priori of psychiatric practice
345
disciplinary 22-23, 26-27, 40-42, 46-48,
51-56, 73, 80, 98, 115,123,127,132,
268, 302
occupation of individual's time, life and
body 47
psychiatric and practice of "direction" 174 psychiatric and its spread 189
technical state 97
of sovereignty 21, 23, 26, 29, 42, 45, 47, 52,
54, 55,79-80,100, 116 surplus power of patients 269
Power knowledge 166, 286, 335, 340, 346, 351 Practice(s)
discursive 13, 354, 362
judicial 105, 239, 244, 246
medical 11, 32, 129,133, 135, 242, 244-45,
298, 306, 313
psychiatric 16, 25, 26-27, 29, 34,
35, 73, 98, 104,124,126,127, 133-35,138,158,165,177,221, 234, 266, 276, 284-85, 287, 345, 352, 355
psychiatric and discourse of truth 27 psychiatric as regulated and concerted
manipulation of power relations 20 asylum and medical theory 180-81
Principle
ol association 98
ol distraction 9 8 , 102
ol the "loreign will" (Falret; Cuislain) 147,
152, 168, 169
ol isolation 9 8 , 103, 112
ol ontogenesis phylogenesis 109
Prolits; see also Illnesses
Irom abnormalities, illegalities, and irregu
larities HO, 124 Prostitution 110-12
Psychiatrist(s); see also Asylum; Body; Power; Surgeon
factor ol the intensification of reality 132 master ol reality 132, 362
master of truth 131, 187
prolessorial dimension of speech 277
? Psychiatry; see also Scene(s)
pharmacological 342
as surplus power 132, 188, 216, 269, 340,
343; see also Asylum tautology test ol reality 268
power over madness and over abnormality 222
proto psychiatry, proto psychiatric 8, 25, 27, 29, 31-33, 94,173, 177, 181, 189, 191,233,362
Psychoanalysis
form of depsychiatrization 138, 342-44, 346 birth of first retreat of psychiatry 138
Psychology, of work 86 Psychopalhoiogy 86, 207 Psychopharmacology 346 Psychosurgery 342
Psy function 85-86, 189
Punishment, medication and 181, 185
Questioning, psychiatric (I'mterrogaloire) 184, 270-77
Relamilializalton ol the worker's lile in the nineteenth century 83-85
Religious orders 64, 70 Residues
historical, ol history 65, 109
ol disciplinary power the leeble minded, the
delinquent, the mentally ill 54 Responsibility 67, 86, 183, 273, 358, 361; see
also Questioning
Restraint 104-7, 120, 124, 143; . see also "No
restrain/"
Retardation, mental 205, 209-10, 212, 213
Schizophenic
paradigmatic figure ol antipsychiatry 358, 365 schizophrenia 266, 358, 361
Sciences of man 56, 73
Servants 5-6, 23, 40-41
Sexuality 124, 321-33
Shower 144,149-50, 158,159, 162-63,169,
176; see also Leu ret
Simulation 135-8, 141, 191, 251, 314, 315-16,
321, 340; see also Hysteria Sovereignty
non individualization of elements to which its relations apply 45
transformation of relationship into discipli nary power 22, 27
Slate apparatus (Appareil d'Fjat) 16, 18, 110 Strategy/strategies 14, 144, 166, 237, 354, 360;
see also Power, Scene(s)
Stupid/las sine morosis(T. Willis) 224 Stupidity 203-4; see also Madman
Subject of knowledge (connaissance) 238, 346 Subject function
within disciplinary relationship 55-56
within relationship ol sovereignty 44, 55 Subjection (assujettissemenl) 28, 29, 86, 178,
189, 362
Suggestion 312, 340; see also Hypnosis Supervisors 4-5, 49, 85, 102,103, 149, 150,
164, 182 Surgeon
as antithesis ol psychiatrist in medical field 188
"Symptomatic suspicion" (Escjuirol) 99, 118
Symptomatological scenario, organization of 3 0 9
Syphilis, cause ol general paralysis 266 System(s), disciplinary 86-87, 93,110-12,
115, 123,129,137, 235, 248, 250, 269, 276, 309, 362
Tabes, tabetic (Duchenne de Boulogne) 300-1, 325
Tactic
of putting to work 154 ol clothing (Ferrus) 153
Theater, as therapeutic site ol madness in classical age 10
Therapeutic process according to Pinel 3, 8, 40 medicinal 12
according to Rsquirol and 209
according to Seguin 207 Rights
Belhomme
imprescriptible (according to Falret) 135, 141
of juridical individual 58 Ritual; see also Scene(s)
general, of the asylum 146
Scene(s); see also Ritual
as ritual, strategy, and battle 9, 19-21 proto psychiatlie 25, 29, 31-3$
ol confrontation 9, 22, 24
of antipsychiatry 31
of cure 10, 29
Index of Notions 381
? 382 INDEX OF NOTIONS
Training (dressage) or the body 48 Trauma, traumatic
Charcot 315, 317-18, 322, 3-13
and hypnosis 314-15 Treatment
psychiatric 143-44, 153, 175, 218
removal or pleasure from 163-64 Truth
perlormative character of statement in game ol cure 132-33
game ol truth in delirium and ol delirium 35
game ol truth and lie tn symptom 136,138
Truth-demonstration 238 transition to technology of 246
Truth event 237-39, 241, 245, 246 as relation ot power 246
Violence 14-16, 18, 28, 29, 44,139,148-49, 204, 341, 351, 354, 355, 358, 361
Visit, ritual of 276
Work 42, 49, 51, 64, 68, 72-77, 81, 86, 107, 126-28, 152-56, 161, 180, 218; . fee also Tactic
Writing 48-52, 56,158, 218 instrument ot discipline 48 police practice 50
? Auxerre (asylum, hospital) 100-1, 118, 154, 171, 196
Beaujon (home, then hospital) 331 Bethlehem (hospital) 17, 119
Bicetre (asylum, then prison, then hospital) 7,
19, 28, 30, 36,105,118,119,145,154,157,158, 170,179,180,183,186,193-94,196,197,199, 212, 214-15, 218, 227, 228, 229, 290, 324
Bourg (asylum) 118
Castel d'Andorte (clinic) 117
Charenton (hospital and boarding house lor
the insane, and then "Esquirol hospital") 7,
145,158,159, 176,179,194,197, 263 Citeaux (abbey and order) 88
Clermont en-Oise (asylum) 125-26, 128, 140 Cluny (abbey and order) 64, 88, 119
Fitz James (clinic and community) 125, 140
Gheel (community) 120, 168, 197
Gorizia (hospital) 345, 347, 357, 365, 366 Grande-Chart reuse (abbey) 1
Hanwell (hospital) 119
Henri Roussel (hospital) 59
Hotel-Dieu (de Paris) (home, hospital) 120,
194,198, 293, 331
Issy les-Moulineaux (orthophrenic establishment) 227
Kingsley Hall (clinic) 31, 37, 345, 347, 366
La Borde (clinic) 357, 366
Leningrad (special psychiatric hospital) 365 Lincoln Asylum 119
Mettray (colony) 84, 91, 108, 120 Montmartre (Dr. Blanche's clinic) 120
Necker (hospital) 294, 324
Passy (Dr. Blanche's clinic) 12()
Pcntonville (prison) 73, 90
Perray-Vaucluse (asylum, community) 61, 196,
212, 218, 229
Petite Roquette (prison) 73, 90
Saint Alban (hospital) 59, 196, 357 Saint Antoine (suburb) 113, 121
Saint James (old folly, and then clinic or
C.
F. Tosquelles, "La problematique du pouvoir dans les collectifs de soins psychiatriques," La Nef 281'1year,no. 42,January March,1971:L'Antipsychiatrie,p. 98.
He stated this in an intervention at the University ol Vincennes on 5 February 1971: "Personally, I do not accept the label anti-psychiatrist. " (Personal notes; J. L. )
On the Italian movement, see: [a| F. Basaglia, [1] ed. , Che cos'e la psichiatria? (Turin: Einaudi, 1973); French translation, Qu'esl<e qu la psychiatrie? trans. R. Maggiori (Paris: Presses universitaires de France, 1977); [ii | "L'Istituzione negata. Rapporto da un ospedale psichiatrico"; Vlnslilution en negation. Rapport su Vhopital psychiatrique de Gori^ia; fiii] "Le rapport de Trieste," in Pratiques de lafolie. Pratiques etfolie (Paris: Ed. Solin, 1981) pp. 5 7 0 . On this current, see also: [ b | G. Jervis, "II Mito dell'Antipsichiatna," Quaderni Piacentini, no. 60 61, October 1976; French translation, Le Mythe de I'antipsychiatrie," trans. B. de Freminville (Paris: ? d. Solin, 1977). [c| R. Castel, "Le ville natale de 'Marco Cavallo,' embleme de I'antipsychiatrie," Critique, no. 435 436, August-September 1983, pp. 628-636. More generally, on anti-psychiatry movements in Europe, see [dj Reseau. Alternative a la
psychiatrie. Collectif international (Paris: Union generale d'Edition, 1977).
F. Basaglia, "L'assistance psychiatrique comme probleme anti-institutionnel: une
experience italienne," Information psychiatrique, vol. 47, no. 2, February 1971: "The tolerant institution, the other face of the violent institution, continues to perform its original func tion without changing its strategic and structural meaning, or the games ol power on which it is based. "
F. Basaglia, "Les institutions de la violence," in Vinstitution en negation, p. 137.
The works of English anti-psychiatry began to be translated and known in France follow- ing a colloquium organized in 1967 in Paris by the Federation des groupes d'Etudes et de Recherches institutionnelles (FGERI), to which Cooper and Laing were invited. See [aj
R. Castel, La Gestion des risques. De Vantipsychiatrie a Vapres-psychanalyse, 1 ? "Grandeurs et servitudes contestaires" (Paris: Ed. de Minuit, 1981) pp. 19 33. fb] J. Postel and D. F. Allen, "History and anti-psychiatry in France" in M. Micale and R. Porter, eds. Discovering the History of Psychiatry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994) pp. 384 414. [c) Recherches special issue Enfance alienee, vol. 2, December 1968 in which there are contributions from D. Cooper, "Alienation mentale et alienation sociale" pp. 48-50, and
R. Laing, "Metanoia. Some experiences at Kingsley Hall" pp. 51-57.
"A more radical questioning led some of us to put forward conceptions and procedures that seem to be absolutely opposed to traditional conceptions and procedures, and which can in fact be considered as the germ of an anti-psychiatry" David Cooper, Psychiatrie et Anti-
psychialrie, p. 9. (This passage does not appear in the original English, Psychiatry and Anti-Psychiatry. }
42.
43- 44.
45-
? 46. 47.
R. D. Laing, The Politics of Experience, pp. 105 6; La politique de ['experience, p. 88.
Report on the activity of the Philadelphia Association (1965-1967), quoted in the article by G. Baillon, "Introduction a l'antipsychiatrie," La Nef, 28lh year, no. 42, January May 1971: L'Anti-Psychiatrie, p. 23. This is why, in his contribution, "Histoire de la folie et antipsychi atrie," to the colloquium at Montreal organized by H. Ellenberger on 9 May 1973: "Faul
d interner les psychiatres? "--to which he refers in "Michel Foucault: An Interview by Stephen Riggins" Essential Works of Foucault, vol. 1, pp. 131-132; French translation, "Une interview de Michel Foucault par Stephen Riggins" trans. F. Durand-Bogaert, Dits et Ecrits, vol. 4, pp. 536 537--he could say: "In the form of anti-psychiatry practiced by Laing and Cooper, it is a question of the de medicalization of the space in which madness is pro- duced. Consequently, it is an anti psychiatry in which the power relationship is reduced to zero. This de medicalization implies not only an institutional reorganization of psychiatric establishments; it is undoubtedly more than a simple epistemological break; the question should perhaps be posed more in terms of an ethnological break than o( a political revolution. Maybe it is not just our economic system, or even our present form of rationalism, but the whole of our immense social rationality as it has been woven historically since the Greeks that reluses today to recognize, at the very heart of our society, an experience of madness that may be a test of truth not under the control oi medical power" (typescript p. 19).
See above, lecture of 7 November 1973, pp. 15 16.
E. Goffman, Asylums: Essays on the Social Siluation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates (New York: Doubleday, 1961); French translation, Asiles: Etudes sur la condition sociale des malades mentaux et autres reclus, trans. L. and Cl. Laine, wilh Preface by R. Castel (Paris: ? d. de Minuit, 1968). See M. Foucault |i| "La verite et les formes juridiques"; pp. 611 612; "Truth and Juridical Forms" pp. 75 76. [iij "Foucault Examines Reason in Service of State Power" an interview with M. Dillon in Campus Report, 12th Year, no. 6, October 1979, pp. 5-6; French translation, "Foucault etudie la raison d'Etat" trans. F. Durand-Bogaert, Dits et Ecrits,vol. 3, pp. 802-803. fiii] "Foucault Examines Reason in Service of State Power" The Three Penny Review, 1st Year, no. 1, 1980, pp. 4 5; French translation, "Foucault Etudie la raison d'Etat trans. F. Durand-Bogaert, Dits et Ecrits, vol. 4, p. 38 (this is a modified version o( the previous reference), and [IV]"Space, Knowledge, and Power" an interview with P. Rabinow, in Essential Works of Foucault, 3, pp. 356-357; French translation, "Espace, savoir et pouvoir" trans. F. Durand-Bogaert, Dits et Ecrits, vol. 4, p. 277. E. Goffman, Asylums, p. 4.
See above, "Course summary," p. 339.
See above, lecture of 12 December 1973, p. 132.
"Foucault Examines Reason in Service of State Power," pp. 4-5; "Foucault Etudie la raison d'Etat;' p. 38.
The battle of Henri Ey (1900-1977) to maintain the "specificity" of psychiatry against psychoanalysis and against biological and socio-political temptations, testifies to this, as does the appearance of a collection edited by F. Caroli entitled, precisely, Specificile de la
psychiatrie (Paris: Masson, 1980).
David Cooper, Psychiatry and Anti-Psychiatry: "In so far as psychiatry represents the interests or pretended interests of the sane ones, we may discover that, in fact, violence in psychiatry is pre eminently the violence of psychiatry" p. 14.
See above, note 31.
See above, lecture ol 6 February 1974, p. 304 sq.
See above, "Course summary" p. 342.
"Histoire de la folie et antipsychiairie" (typescript) p. 12. Summarized with some changes in the "Course summary. "
Ibid.
"Le grand enfermemeni" Dits et Ecrits, vol. 2, p. 301.
48. 49.
50. 51. 52. 53-
54.
55-
56. 57. 58. 59.
60. 61.
Course Context 367
? Ackerknecht, Erwin Heinz 198, 262, 364 Adams, R. A. 324
Adnes, Andre 36
Alembertjean Le Rond d' 259
Alencon, Edouard d' 8 9 Alexander IV (pope) 257 Algarron, Jacques 351 Alleau, Rene 258
Allen, David F. 366
Althusser, Louis 18
Amandry, Pierre 260
Amard, Louis Victor Frederic 169 Ame, Charles Francois (patient) 293 Arnauld, Antoine 140
Auenbrugger, Leopold 324 Augustine, Aurelius Augustinus
(saint) 88
Augustine (patient) 331 Ayme,Jean 366 AymenJ. B. 259
Azam, Paul 294
Babinski, Joseph Francois Felix 142, 323, 332-33, 342
Baillarger, Jules Gabriel Francois 197, 267, 289, 292, 325, 326
Baillon, Guy 367
Balard, Antoine Jerome 291 Ballet, Gilbert 231
Balvet, Paul 196
Barbaroux, N. 90
Barker, John 259
Barnes, Mary 31-32, 37, 347 Basaglia, Franco 341, 345, 347, 357,
365, 366
Baudin, Louis 89
Bayard, Henri Louis 141, I95
Bayle, Antoine Laurent Jesse 141, 263, 267, 289, 306, 326
Bayle, Gaspard Laurent 198,199 Beauchesne, H. 227
Beaudouin, Henri 59
Beccaria, Cesare 17
Becher, Hubert 8 9
Belhomme, Jacques Etienne 205-6, 224, 225,
226
Belloc, Hippolyte 156,171,192
Bentham, Jeremy 41,60, 73-79, 90, 91, 93,
102-3,106
Bergboff, Emanuel 259
Berillon, Edgar 294
Berke, Joe 31-32, 37, 347
Berliere, Ursmer 88
Bernard, Claude 142, 279, 291
Bernardin, Alexandre Edme Maurice 145, 149,
195
Bernbeim, Hippolyte 316, 318, 331, 341 Berthier, Pierre 100, 117, 118
Berthold de Calabre 8 9
Bertrand, Alexandre 255
Bessejean Martial 8 8 , 8 9
Bichat, Marie Francois Xavier 188, 198, 298,
299, 302, 303, 323, 324, 336
Binet, Alfred 61
Bini, Lucio 195
Binswanger, Ludwig 364
Bixler, Elizabetb S. 196
Blanche, Esprit Sylvestre 110, 112, 113, 120-21,
169
Bleandonu, Gerard 196 Boerhaave, Hermann 260 Boisseau, Edmund 142, 330 Boissier de Sauvages, Francois 225 Bollotte, Gustave 117
INDEX OF NAMES
? 370 INDEX OF NAMES
Bongert, Yvonne 257
Bonnafe, Lucien 59, 264, 351, 352, 355, 364,
365, 366
Bordeu, Theophile 259
Bonssov, Vladimir 365
Borneman, Ernst 170
Borromeo, Carlo (saint) 193
Bouchardeau, G. 230
Bouche-Leclercq, Auguste 260
Boucher, Louis 194
Bouchet, Camille 168, 197
Boukovski, Wladimir 365
Bourgey, Louis 259
Bourgin, Georges 90
Bourneville, Desire Magliore 142, 199, 217-18,
220-21, 224, 225, 227, 228, 229, 230, 318,
331
BousquetJ. B. E. 292
Bouzon, Jean 91
Braguette (the widow Brouillard, called)
(patient) 136-37, 142, 285, 293 Braid, James 285-86, 294-95 Braun, Lucien 258
Brauner, Alfred 227
Bredero, Adriaan Hendrik 88
Briand, Marcel 228
Brierre de Boismont, Alexandre Jacques
Francois 109, 112-14, 118, 120, 121,169 Briftaut, Jean Baptiste Lodois 325
Briquet, Paul 332
Broca, Pierre Paul 285-86, 294, 300-3, 324-25 Brochin, Hippolyte 168, 255
Brouardel, Paul 332 Broussais, Francois 336, 349 BroussardJ. 90
Bru, Paul 194
Brucker, Joseph
Bruno, Giordano 258 Bruttin,Jean Marie 327 Buntz, Herwig 258 Burckhardt, Titus 258 Burdin, Claude 293
Burton, Marc 365
Bus, Cesar de 90
Butler, Cuthbert 88
Buvat Pochon, Christine 169
Caro, Elme Marie 193
Caron, Michel 258
Castel, Robert 18, 36, 87,199, 229, 263, 347,
366, 367
Cele, Jean 6 0
Celina (patient) 320, 332
Cerise, Laurent Alexis Philibert 229, 325 Cerletti, Ugo 195
Chagny, Andre 194
Chantraine, Pierre 255, 259
Chaptal, Jean Antoine, The Count ol
Chanteloup 194
Charcotjean-Martin 98, 136-37, 142, 202,
224, 264, 269, 288, 297-98, 308-32,
339-43, 360, 361
Charlesworth, Edward 119
Chassaigne, Marc 60
Chastenet, Armand Marc Jacques de, marquis
de Puysegur 293
Christian,Jules 289
Cindadjean 194
Cochin, Austin 91, 228, 229 Cochin, Jean Denys Marie 228, 229 Cognet, Louis 60
Condillac, Etienne Bonnot de 78, 91 Conollyjohn 119
Cooper, David 341, 345, 347, 358, 365,
366, 367
Copernicus, Nicolaus 138
Corvisart des Marets,Jean Nicolas 324 Coulmiers, Francois de 194
Cousin, Patrice 88
Couteaux,J. 194
Cox, Joseph Mason 33, 37,129, 130, 132, 137,
140, 169
Cranefield, Paul 225 Cullen, William 224, 326
Daquin, Joseph 120, 168, 224, 225 Daremberg, Charles Victor 259, 260, 261 Darwin, Charles Robert 120, 223
Darwin, Erasmus 169
Daumezon, Georges 59, 117, 196, 264 Davaine, Casimir Joseph 226
Davenne, Henri Jean Baptiste 91, 226, 227,
228, 229, 230
Dechambre, Amedee 142, 291 Defert, Daniel 37, 256, 364 Defradas,Jean 2 6 0
Dehaussy, Jacques 91 Dehove,Gerard 90
Dejerine, Joseph Jules 230, 290, 327
Caire, Michel 196
Calmeil, Louis Florentin 226, Canguilhem, Georges 202, 224 Canivez,Joseph-Marie 88 Caquot, Andre 260
8 9 , 9 0
263
? Delasiauve, Louis 329
Ddaye, Jean Baptiste 141, 263, 326 Delcourt, Marie 255
Deleuze, Gilles 87
Delsaut, Pierre Joseph 1 9 8 Demersay, Alfred 89, 9 0
Demetz, Frederic Auguste 91 Derrida, Jacques 292
Desaive,Jean Paul 2 6 2
Descartes, Rene 27, 37, 130, 140,
283, 292
Detienne, Marcel 256
Devernoix, Pierre 263
Dewhurst, Kenneth 2 5 9
Diderot, Denis 259
Dolleans, lidouard 9 0
Doncoeur, R. P. 193
Doutrehente, Georges 290
Dowbiggin, Ian Robert 231
Dreylus, Ferdinand 91
Dubois, Jean 325
Dubois, Frederic (called Dubois d'Amiens)
293, 326
Dubuisson (Jean Baptiste Theophile
Jacquelin) 204, 211; . vee Jacquelin Dubuisson Dubuisson, Paul. D . 264
Duchenne, Cuillaume Benjamin Amand, called
de Boulogne 288, 295, 300-1, 311-12, 323,
324, 325
Dudon, Paul 193
Ducpetiaux, Fdouard 91
Dullinjacalyn 199
Dupin, Flenri262
Dupotet de Sennevoy, Jules 142, 255, 293 Dupuy,J. Marc 117
Dupre (patient) 144-53, 157-59, 161-64, 167,
169, 170, 171, 176, 290
Durand, Jean Pierre, called Durand de Gros
(aliasJoseph Philips) 286-87, 294 Duval, Andre 8 8
F. delstein, Ludwig 258
Einstein, Albeit 138
FJiade, Mircea 258
Fllenberger, Henri F. 264, 293, 361, 367 Erichsen,John Eric 330
E.
smein, Adhemar 257
Esquirol,Jean Etienne Dominique 263, 272,
279, 282, 289, 290, 291-92, 293, 326, 331,
338-40, 344, 345, 347, 349, 355-56, 3 6 6 Fsterson, Aaron 358
Index of Names 371 Ewald, Francois 37, 364
Ey, Henri 292, 326, 367
Faber, Knud 259
Fainberg, Victor 365
Falretjean-Pierre 117-18,119,141,152,168,170,
186-87,197,198,199, 212, 227, 228, 263, 290 Falret, Jules Philippe 230, 307, 321, 327, 332 Fassbinder, Maria 9 0
Fere, Charles 142, 230, 328
Fernald, Walter 213, 229
Ferrus, Guillaume Marie Andre 120, 153-54,
170, 197, 199, 212, 228, 230, 326 Fiorelli, Pieio 258
Fischer Homberger, Esther 330 Flaceliere, Robert 255, 2 6 0
Fleury, Louis Joseph Desire 327
Fodere, Francois Emmanuel 2, 3-4, 7, 15, 17, 29,
37, 94, 98,117,168, 224, 331 Foissac, Pierre 293
Foil in, Eugene Francois 294 Fonssagnves,Jean Baptiste 168 Fontana, Alessandro 264 Fontanille, Raphael 264 Fournet, Jules 108-9, 118, 120 Fournier, Allred 2 8 9
Foville, Achille (de) 141, 226, 263, 326, 327 Franchi,Jean 194
Francis ol Assisi (saint) 8 9
Francis de Sales (saint) 193
Frederick II 48
Freud, Sigmund 98, 138, 167, 170, 221,231,
292, 308, 321-22, 327, 332, 349 Funck-Brentano, Frantz 194
Caillac, Henri 90, 91
Galbraith, Georgina R. 8 8
Galen (Claudius Galenus) 245, 259, 261 Ganzenmuller, Wilhelm 258
Garrabe, Jean 196
Garrison, Fielding Hudson295
Gaspann, Adrien, comte de 36
Gastaldy, Joseph 194
Caudemet,Jean 257
Gaulres, MJ. 61, 89, 231
Gauthier, Aubin 142, 255, 329
Genevieve (patient) 322, 332
Genii Perrin, Georges 231
Gentis, Roger 353, 365
George III, King 20-21, 25, 27, 29, 31, 32, 33,
36, 40, 41, 360
? 372 INDEX OF NAMES
Georget, Etiennejean 17, 28, 29, 37, 136, 141,
142,148,170, 195, 224, 225, 226, 255, 262,
263, 285, 293, 325, 331
Gerdy, P. N. 326
Gerspach, Edouard 60
Gicklhorn, Josef 332
Gicklhorn, Renee 332
Girard de Cailleux, Henri 100, 118, 154, 169,
171, 182, 196
Giraudy, Charles Francois Simon
194, 197
Glotz, Gustave 257
Goffman, Erving 359-60, 367
Gontard, Maurice 228
Goubert, Pierre 262
Gralien, Badin 89
Greenwood, Major 262
Gregory IX (pope) 257
Griesinger, Wilhelm 195, 289, 290, 326 Grigorenko, Piotr 365
Grmeck, Mirko Drazen 199
Groote, Gerard 59-60, 67
Guattari, Felix 87, 357
Guesstel, Charles 171
Guillain, Georges 194, 308, 327 Guillemaud, Claude 329
Guilleret 119
Guillermou, Alain 89
Guilly, Paul 295
Guiraud,Jean 258
Guislain, Joseph 29, 37, 117, 119, 120, 168,
169, 195
Guizot, Francois Pierre Guillaume 212, 228 Guzman, Dominique de 88
Habill (patient) 329
Hack Tuke, Daniel 330
Flalliday, William Reginald 260 Hamelin, G. 259
Ilamon, Georges 329
Hamoniaux, M. 9 0
Ilannaway, Caroline 262
Haslam, John 3, 9, 17, 29, 37, 119 Flatzleld, Henri 329
Haussmann, Georges F_ugene, Baron
170, 197
Haymaker, Webb 324 Hchert (patient) 293
1 Iecaen, Henri 325 Hecquet, Philippe 168 Heidegger, Martin 255-56
Helvetius, Claude Arien 78, 91 Helyot, R. P. 88-89, 90
Flermans, Francis 89
Hippocrates 242, 245, 255, 258-59,
260-61
Hobbes, Thomas 57, 61 Hoffbauer. Johann Christoph 263, 338 Hoffmann, Friedrich 248, 260, 261 Honorius 111 (pope) 88
Huard, Pierre 199
Hunter, Richard 17, 36
Husserl, Edmund 255
Husson, Bernard 258
Husson, Henri Marie 255
Hutin, Serge 258
Huvelin, Henri 193
Hyma, Albert 60
Ignatius Loyola (saint) 89, 193 llberg, Johannes 261
Imbault-Huart, Marie Jose 199, 262 Innocent IV (pope) 89, 257
Itard, Jean Marc Gaspard 211, 226-27, 263
Jacquelin Dubuisson, Jean Baptiste Theophile 204, 225, 226
Janet, Pierre 349
Jean Nesmy, Claude 88 Jervis, Giovanni 366 Joeger, Murielle 262 Joly, Robert 258
Joos, Paul 255
Jouanna, Jacques 258 JuchetJ. 196-97
Kanner, Leo 225
Kant, Immanuel 291 Kantorowicz, Ernst 45, 60, 91 Kaplan, Steven 90
Kepler, Johannes 138
King, Lester Snow 225, 259, 26t) Knowles, David 88
Koechlin, Philippe 117
Koyre, Alexandre 89
Kraepelin, Emile 339
Kraft, Ivol 229
Kucharski, Paul 255
Labatt, Hamilton 119 Labbe, Denise 351 Labitte, Gustave 140
? Laennec, Rene Theophile Hyacinthe 198-99, 298-99, 302-3, 323, 324
Latontaine, Charles 294
Lailler (pharmacist) 255
Laine, Tony 352, 365
Laing, Ronald D. 341, 358, 365, 366, 367 Laingui, Andre 117
Lallemand, Leon 91
La Mettriejulien Offray de 260, 329 Lancelot, Claude 140
Landrc-Beauvais, Augustin Jacob 293 Laurent, Armand 141, 291, 330
Lauzier,Jean 59
Lea, Henry Charles 89, 257-58, 330
Lear, King 21, 36; see Shakespeare
Leblanc, Sebastien 194
Leborgne (patient) 324
Le Breton, Jacques 120
Lecler, Joseph 88
Leclercq, Henri 258
Le Filliatre, Gustave 289
Le Gauley, Guy 196, 231
Le Goff, Jacques 8 9
Legrain, Paul Maurice 230
Legrand du Saulle, Henri 117, 168, 329
Le Guillant, Louis 264
Leibovici, Marcel 2 6 0
Lekai, Louis Julius 88
Le Logeais (patient) 331
Lelut, Louis Francisque 226, 326
Le Paulmier, Claude Stephen 224
Le Roy Ladune, Emmanuel 262
Leuret, Francois 18, 31, 37, 107, 117, 120, 130,
140,144,145-46, 148, 149-53, 157-64,166, 169-71, 174, 176-77,180,184,193, 194,195, 197, 215, 226, 262, 277, 290, 339
Levy,Jean Philippe 257 Libert, Lucien 117 Lichtenthaeler, Charles 258 Liebig,Justus 255
Littre, Emile 255, 258, 327 Longet, Francois Achille 325 Lourdaux, Willem 6 0 Lubimov, Alexei 224
Lucas, Charles Jean Marie 9 0 Lugon, Clovis 9 0
Macalpine, Ida 36
MacPherson, Crawlord Brough 61 Magendie, Francois 324
Magnan, Valentin 119, 230, 326
Mahnjean Berthold 88
Maisonneuve, Henri 258
Malson, Lucien 227
Mandonnet, Pierre 88
Marc, Charles Chretien Henri 227, 263, 264,
291
Margolin, Jean Claude 258
Marie, Pierre 325, 330
Marin, Louis 140
Marindaz, Georges 194
Marivaux, Pierre Carlet de Chamblain de 79,
91
Martel. Jean Georges Hippolyte 196 MartinJ. G. G. 227
Mason Cox see Cox
Masse, L. 262
Mathieu, Paul 194
Matton, Sylvain 258
Maury, Alfred 292
Maxwell, James Clerk 138
Meduna, Laszlo von 195
Mesmer, Antonius 294
Meyer, Jean 262
Mialle, Simon 293
Micale, Mark 366
Michea, Claude Francois 168, 289, 326 Michel, Albert 257
Michelet, Marcel 6 0
Mignont, Henri 264
Millepierres, Francois 261
Mir, Gabriel Codina 60
Moliere, Jean Baptiste Poquelin 245, 261 Monfalcon, Jean Baptiste 91
Monneret, Edouard 327
Monteggia, Giovanni Battista 291 Monval,Jean 194
Moore, Stanlord 289
Moorman, John 89
Moreau de Tours, Joseph Jacques 168, 197,
255, 278-83, 290-93, 326
Moreau de Tours, Paul 224
Morel, Benedict Augustin 119, 120, 195, 223,
230,278,290,291
Muel, Francine 61
Miiller, Charles 36
Muraton, Lodovic Antonio 89 Myrvold, Renate 225
Nadaud, Martin 329 Newton, Isaac 78 Nicole, Pierre 140
Index of Names 373
? 37'i INDEX OF NAMES
Noguchi, Hideyo 289 Nottarp, Hermann 257 Nutton, Vivian 261 Nyllelerjohann Rudolf
120
Rappard, Philippe 366
Rapin, Georges 351
Raynier, Julien 59
Recamier, Joseph 255
Rech de Montpellier, Armand Philippe
Hippolyte 169
Reisseisen, Francois Daniel 263 Renaudin, Louis Francois Emile 326
Rey, Philippe 213, 228
Richard, Jean Pierre 329
Ric hard III 21;see Shakespeare
Richer, Marie Louis Pierre 328
Riese, Wallher 295
Ritti, Antoine 225, 289
Riviere, Pierre 263-64, 272, 290
Robert de Molesmes (saint) 88
Robin, Charles Philippe Ml
Roc hard, Jules Eugene 198
Rochemonteix, Camilie de 60
Rollet, Claude 91
Roosen Runge, Heinz 258
Rosen, George 262
Rostan, Louis Leon 141, 142, 255, 293, 326 Rot hschuh, Karl E. 2 6 0
Rouhier, Eugene 119
Roux, Georges 255
Rover Collard, Antoine Athanase 263 Rucart, Marc 59
Sackler, Arthur M. 195
Sade, Donatien Alplionse Francois, marquis de
17
Sagar, Jean Michel 224
Saint Yves, Isabelle 227
Samson, Catherine (patient) 255, 293
Sauzet, Marc 9 0
Schiller, Francis 324
Schipperges, Heinrich 258
Seguin, Onesime Edouard 205, 207-12, 214-17,
221,225,226-27, 228,229 Semelaigne, Rene 120, 196, 197 Senes, V. 329
Serieux, Paul 117
Servan,Joseph Michel Antoine 17, 40, 59 Sessevalle, Francois de 8 9
Sevest re, Pierre 194
Shakespeare, William 36
Sicard, R. A. 227 Simon, Nadine 194 Simon, Theodore 61 Socrates 255 Soubeiran, Eugene 255
Obolensky, Dimitri 88 CEchslin, R. L. 8 8
Olier, Jean Jacques 193 Olphe Galliard, Michel 193 Oppenheim, Hermann 330 Orcibaljean 89
Ouryjean 357, 366
Owen, Alan Robert George 329
Pacaut, Marcel 88
Page, Herbert William 330
Parchappe de Vinay, Jean Baptiste Maximien
182, 196, 199, 214, 229, 326
Parent de Curzon, F. mmanuel 91
Parigot,J. 120
Parmemdes 255
Pasteur, Louis 336-37, 340, 341-42
Paul 111(pope) 89
Paumelle, Philippe
Peisse, Louis 294
Pelicier, Yves 227
Penot, Achille9l
Peter,Jean Pierre 262
Petit, Marc Antoine 198
Petronille (patient) 136
Philips, Joseph 294; see also Durand Pinel,Jean Pierre Casimir 109, 120
Pinel, Philippe 2, 3, 6, 8, 9-10, 14-15, 17-18,
19-20, 23, 25-29, 36-37, 40, 94,105,108, 109, 118, 120, 129-30, 132, 137,140, 141, 146, I68,169,174,183-84,193-94,196-97, 204, 211, 225-26, 279, 283, 289, 293, 308, 327
Pinel, Scipion 36
Plato 236, 255-56
Ploss, F. mil Ernst 258
Pohlenz, Max 258
Portalis, Jean Etienne Mane 117 Porter, Roy 366
Postel, Jacques 56, 197, 366
Pottet, Eugene 194
Pussinjean Baptiste 10, 183, 196-97 Puysegur see Chaste net
Quetel, Claude 168
Race, Victor ( patient) 293 Ranee, abbot ol 193
264
? Souques, Alexandre Achille Cyprien 324, Spinoza, Baruch 291
Strauss, Charles 194
Surzur. Jean Marcel Joseph 194 Sydenham, Thomas 168, 242, 258-60 Szasz, Thomas 264, 345, 347
Tanon, Celestin Louis 257-58
Taylor, Frank Sherwood
Terme, Jean Francois 91
Temkin, Owsei 198, 325
Thomas a Kempis 6 0
Thomsen, R. 330
Thuillier, Guy 227
Torrubia, Horace 366
Tosquelles, Francois 264, 357, 366 Toulouse, Edouard 59
Tourdes, Gabriel 142, 330 Trelat, Ulysse 169
Trenel, Marc 117
Trilhe, Robert 88 Tschudy, Raymond
Tuke, Samuel 119
Tuke, William 17, 119
Tiirgot, Anne Robert Jacques, Baron of
L'Aulne 262
Vacandard, Elphcge 257-58 Valentin, Louis 195
Vallery Radot, Rene 121 Valous, Guy de 88
Van Brock, Nadia 259
Van Helmont,Jean Baptiste 168
Van Ruysbroek, Johannes 59, 8 9
Veitri, Ilza 259
Velpeau, Alfred Armand Louis Marie 294 Vernant,Jean Pierre 260
Vernet, Felix 89
Viala, Casimir Jean 91
Vibert, Charles 330
Vicaire, Marie I lumbert
Vie, Jacques 194, 225
Victor, de PAveyron 227
Vigouroux, Auguste 264
Vincent, Francis 193
Vincent de Paul (saint) 193, 194 Vinchon,Jean 225
Vlastos, Gregory 255
Voisin, Auguste 119, 290
Voisin, Felix 141, 211, 213, 220, 227-28, 230, 263
Walsh, Jean 261
Watterwille, Adolphe de 91
Werner, Ernst 8 8
Willis, Francis 20, 22, 23, 27, 36, 40 Willis, Thomas 224-25
Wiriot, Mireille 198
Woillez, Eugene Joseph 140
Yates, Frances Amelia 258
Zaloszyc, Armand 230 Zazzo, Rene 61, 225 Zimmerman, B. 89
8 8
258
8 8
Index of Names 375
? Abnormality 115, 124, 210-11, 221-23, 272
condition of possibility of madness 272
economic problem of cost of 220 Alienation, mental 214
A. L. J. Bayle 289, 326
Esquirol 224
Fournet 120
Parchappe de Vinay 214 Pinel 226, 293
Amentia (Sagar) 224, 225
Amentia morosis (Boissier de Sauvages)
225
Amyl nitrate (Balard) 278, 291 Analysis
of power, discursive 13
of representations 40
Anamnesis 176, 177, 186, 187, 192, 203,
270, 362
Anesthesia, Hemianaesthesia (Charcot) 309,
311
Anomie of disciplinary systems 54 Antipsychiatry/ic 13, 39, 254, 341,
342, 344-47, 350; see also Hysteric;
Schizophrenia
Aphasia 300, 301, 303, 304; see also Broca
anarthria 303, 325 Apparatuses (clispositifs)
disciplinary 63
neurological 303, 311
of power 350
of sovereignty 52, 64-65
of the statement of truth 157
Archeology of knowledge 238-39, 256 Architecture 102, 127, 182, 365; see also
Panopticon
eighteenth century hospital 346
Assimilation ol mad - primitive - delinquent 109
Asylum(s)
administration of 182
and the family 94, 97
field of battle 7
medically demarcated space 173
site of confrontation between the doctor's will
and madness as disturbed will 339
site of formation of a discourse ol truth 93 game of reality in 175
general ritual of 146
Asylum tautology 165-66, 175 Autobiographical account 203
element ol psychiatric and criminological practice 158
Behavior
automatic or reflex 301 complex 3 0 0
voluntary 301
Biology 11, 295
evolutionary 222-23
Pasteurian and transformation of the hospital
336-37 Body
anatomical-pathological 316 neurological 314, 323 family's 271
psychiatrist's 4
sexual 323
Body power, synaptic contact 40-41 Braidism 285-86, 294, 295; see also Braid
Ceremonies of deposition 20 Childhood
abnormal 221-22,
memories of 125, 158, 161, 166, 271, 318
origin of mental illness 202
INDEX OF NOTIONS
? Children
mad 202-3, 221-22, 224
psychiatrization of abnormal and idiot 212,
214, 217, 227-30 Chloroform 234, 235, 255, 278
Classification
psychiatric nosological, practical destination
of 128, 133
or taxonomy as general form of empirical
knowledge in classical age 72-73 Clinic, neurological 298
Clinical presentation
constitutive ritual ol psychiatrist's medical
power 187
theory of (Falret) 186
Clinics (maisons cle sante) 110, 112-16 Colonies, asylum 166
Colonization
submission to force 8
classical conception 129, 144 labyrinth ol fictional verification 35
Degeneration (Morel) 223, 230 Delinquents, organization into an
"underworld" 54
Delirium 28, 34-35,100-1,131-32, 147-51,154,
163-64,173-74, 204-7, 322, 338
hypochondriacal 2 6 6
theme of omnipotence in 147-49
Dementia 180,195, 204-7, 225, 226, 253, 267,
306, 326
illness of old age (according to Belhomme) 225
absolute deprivation of reason (according to Daquin) 225
"innate dementia" (Cullen) 224 Dependence 8, 80,177,178 Depsychiatrization; see also psychoanalysis
"psychiatry ol zero production" 342 disconnection ol medical power and all the
specilic ellects ol asylum space 343 re-establishment of medical power in its
correct eflectiveness 342 Development, mental
halted (Seguin) 207; see also Idiocy retarded (Seguin) 205, 207, 210; see also
Retardation, mental Diagnosis
absolute 266-67, 304, 306, 308, 311
differential 251, 265, 266, 304-10, 315, 321 "Direction" 179, 185, 193
spiritual 174, 193
Discipline 2, 25, 29, 41, 46-51, 53-57, 65, 70,
73, 82, 85-87, 97,112,115,123-25, 132,155, 181,188, 202, 235, 249, 252-53, 276, 335, 343
asylum discipline as lorce and lorm of reality
73, 86,124,132,155,181, 249, 253 disciplines as techniques for the distribu
tion ol bodies, individuals, time, and
force of work 73
Discourse 39, 58, 164-67, 320, 357
anatomical or physio pathological 133 clinical, classilicatory or nosological 133-34 psychiatric 6, 7, 41
of the hysteric 305
ol truth 10, 13, 26, 27, 32, 40, 87, 93-94,
101, 135, 362 Dispositions, tactical 359
Dissimulation 221, 266
pedagogical, ol youth
of idiocy 211-12
6 6 - 6 8
ol vagabonds, beggars, nomads, delinquents, and prostitutes 70
within psychiatric space 211-12 Communities
lay 41
religious 41, 64, 65 Conlession
practice of 177, 270
and ordeal test ol truth 140, 234, 257 Conlinement (internement)
at beginning ol nineteenth century 50
1838 law 59, 94, 95, 212, 219
Conlinement (renfermemenl) in the classical age
70, 95
Constraint, instruments ol physical 104 Convulsions 306-7, 310, 314
Corporal apparatuses 105
extracting truth 105 marking, branding 105 security and testing 105
Crime, madness and 249 Criminology 86, 335 Crisis
hysterical 274, 304
intrinsic leature ol illness 243
moment ol therapeutic intervention 244 suppression ol in medicine and psychiatry 249 test ol reality 268
technique ol as technique ol test 243-44
Cure(s) 3, 8, 11, 26, 29, 101-2,112-13,131-33,
144,160-64,166, 178-79,188, 236, 283, 356
scene ol conlronlation 1C)
Index of Notions 377
? 378 INDEX OF NOTIONS
Doctor(s)
producer of truth of illness 342, 361 asylum doctor as master of madness 264,
340, 361
dependence of patient on 177
questioning ot power of since end of nine
teenth century 346
Dream 281-83, 291, 292; see also Drugs,
Madness Drugs
experience of drugs as "internal grasp" of madness 281
instruments ol discipline 277
means to reveal primordial seat ol madness
280
medico-legal use of 278
Moreau de Tours 168, 255, 278-79, 281-83
Electroshock 181, 195
Epilepsy 305, 310, 320-21, 325, 328, 340 Ergot herapy 127
Error
criterion ot madness 7
of the mad person 27, 130-31 Ether, etherisation 278, 291 Exercise(s)
ascetic 41, 67
corporal 217
Expertise, medico legal 346, 351
Falsehood 136, 137,138,139, 191
Family
body of, as material substratum ol madness
271
cell of sovereignty 82, 84
disciplining of 82, 83, 115, 128, 202 tamilialization of, and in, therapeutic milieu
110, 114
model for psychiatric practice 16, 26,112, 127 support for abnormality and madness 223 switch-point for disciplinary systems 81-82
Faradization, localized (Duchenne de Boulogne) 300, 324
Feeble minded (Seguin) 54, 115, 191 Force, insurrection ot 7, 8
Freedom, deprivation of 155
Frenzy (Jureur) 19, 117, 204, 224 "Functional mannequin"
maneuver of 311 and hypnosis 315
"Furieux" 7, 117
Genealogy ol knowledge (connaissance)
239, 346
Hallucination 7, 28, 33, 9 9 , 1 0 0 , 267, 274, 278, 345
fixed ideas (Labitte) 128, 280 Hashish 234
intoxication and mechanisms of questioning 278-84
therapy (Moreau de Tours) 278 Heredity
pathological 270
predispositions 271, 275, 289 History
of disciplinary apparatuses (dispositifs) 63 ot psychiatry 12, 26, 31, 32, 133, 135, 136,
138, 139, 177, 185, 202, 220, 234, 269,
282, 350
of truth 235,237,238 Hospital
curing machine 101-2
site ol knowledge and ot realization ot
illness 252
space tor realization ot madness 252
Humanism, humanist 14, 29
Hypnosis 31, 234, 270, 277, 284, 285-88,
312-13, 314, 316, 318, 322
Durand de Gros 287 suggestion 312, 340 trauma 314, 317-18
Hypochondria 266, 306, 327 Hypotaxic state (Durand de Gros)
286, 294
Hysteria 26, 98, 135,136, 168,199, 202, 233,
254, 266, 269, 304, 306, 308, 309, 513,
314, 321-22, 323, 340, 341; see also Charcot asylum 138
natural 304-5, 312
struggle against psychiatric power 264 battle of 308
codilication of symptoms and epilepsy 310, 313
stigmata 3 0 9 Hysteric(s)
perfect patient 341
first, true militant ol antipsychiatry 254 Hystero epilepsy (Charcot) 325,
328, 330
? Iconography of power 23
Idiocy, idiots, idiotism 203-14, 221; sec a/so
Alienation, mental
Esquirol and Belhomme 224, 225, 226 Jacquelin Dubuisson 211
Pinel 211
Seguin 208, 225, 227
as disability, monstrosity, and non illness
207
annexation by psychiatric power 219 theoretical specification 219
Illness(es)
mental and "true" 305
ol dillerenttal diagnosis and of absolute
diagnosis 266-67, 304, M)6, 308, 311 economic problem ol pro! it lrom 313 pleasure and 162-66
Imbecility 203-5, 211, 214
Dac]iiin 1()8
error that has become obnubilation 204
Individual
disciplinary 56, 57, 58 juridical 57, 58 psychological 85
Individualization 15, 45, 54-56, 6 9 , 75, 78, 8 0 , 86,103, 148, 359
schematic, administrative, and centralized
49, 52
Ingenii Lmbecillitas (Boissier de Sauvages) 225 Inquiries 212-13
Instinct; see also Idiocy (Seguin)
Seguin 221
the will not to will 215 lnstitution(s); see also Panopticon
asylum, psychiatric 35, 87, 350, 352, 353, 355, 357-60
analysis ol 33
Insurrection ol subjugated knowledge 353 Interdiction 94-96, 355
Judgement, classical conception ol 131
Knowledge (savon^; see also Power knowledge medical 2, 3, 5, 11, 28, 107, 166, 179, 191,
192, 235, 251, 277, 286
psychiatric 4, 14, 96, 128, 144, 181,183,188,
233, 250, 251, 308, 350, 354, 355 scientilic 134, 138, 235, 245, 340
ol the individual 78
tokens ol 235
Language, re use ol 149 Laudanum 143, 168, 181, 234, 277 Lies (see lalsehood) 191, 327, 332 Lypemania (Esquirol) 152, 180,
195, 206
Macrophysics ol sovereignty 27 Madman, stupid (Daquin) 224 Madness
assertion ol omnipotence 147-48 original experience of "true man" 354 mental illness 306, 308, 346, 354 neurological lesions 133 demedicalization of 346
etiology 133
reality ol non reality of 177
Magnetism
adjunct of doctor's physical power 284 and crisis 284
Mania 2, 7, 180, 195, 204, 206,
266, 283
without delirium 7 Medication
physical or physiological 143
punishment and 180-81 Medicine
private practice/consultation 202, 245, 343 clinical, as epistemological model of medical
truth 11 statistical 248
autonomization and institutionalization of mental medicine 355
Melancholy 8, 101, 103, 204, 266 Mesmerism 284-85, 294 Microphysics
of bodies 14, 362
ol power 16, 33, 35, 82, 36O
Military service 81, 115, 135
Money 24,145,152-53, 155, 156,177 Money delecation relation (Leuret) 153,
156, 170
Monomania 8, 100, 104, 128, 180, 201, 206,
249, 272
homicidal 195, 264 "Moral treatment"
as therapeutic process 9
unacceptabilily ol desire as element ol I76 game ol reality in 175
and asylum apparatus (disposi'lif) 151
and proto psychiatric scenes }1
Index of Notions 379
? 380 INDEX OF NOTIONS
Nature, therapeutic site of madness in classical age 338
Need(s), management ol 152 Neurology
analysis ol intentional attitude 302
study ol synergies 301
Neuropathology 191, 298, 300, 302, 314, 323 Neuroses
disturbance ol relational I unctions 327 pathological consecration ol thanks to dil
ferential diagnosis 308 sexual component ol 307
"No restraint" (Conolly) 104-6, 119, 154 Normalization 55, 57, 86, 350; see also
Psychiatric knowledge
Objectivity, psychiatric, asylum order as condition ol 6
Omnivisibility 48; see also Panopticon Opium 168, 234, 235, 278, 291
opiates 143, 168, 277
Order, disciplinary asylums, workshops,
barracks, schools, monasteries 3, 47, 8 0 ,
107, 129, 178
Orphanages 74, 84, 178
"Orthopedics" (Durand de Gros) 286, 344
mental 31
psychological and moral 8, 108, 287 Orthophrenia (F. Voisin) 211, 213
Panopticon/panoptic; see also Architecture; Omnivisibility; Bentham
intensifier ol force 74
model for any institution 73-74
power with materiality of 77
Paralysis, general 133, 249, 266-67, 289, 300;
see also Syphilis; Baillarger; A. L. J. Bayle; Fournier
as "good illness" 306
Pathological anatomy 134, 141, 188, 221, 242, 248-50, 263, 265, 267, 271, 275, 287-88, 297-99, 300, 306
of mental illness 165, 179-80
Pedagogy 41, 67-68, 86, 97, 124, 239, 247
as "therapy" lor idiocy and mental retarda
tion 190, 192, 210 of deal mutes 212
Physiology
experimental 279
nervous phy. ol madness 145
Pithiatism(Babinski) 332-33, 342
Power
analytics ol 13
imbalance of in psychiatric treatment 146,
148, 149
analysis of in terms of technology, and
strategy and tactics 13-14, 177, 351 relations as a priori of psychiatric practice
345
disciplinary 22-23, 26-27, 40-42, 46-48,
51-56, 73, 80, 98, 115,123,127,132,
268, 302
occupation of individual's time, life and
body 47
psychiatric and practice of "direction" 174 psychiatric and its spread 189
technical state 97
of sovereignty 21, 23, 26, 29, 42, 45, 47, 52,
54, 55,79-80,100, 116 surplus power of patients 269
Power knowledge 166, 286, 335, 340, 346, 351 Practice(s)
discursive 13, 354, 362
judicial 105, 239, 244, 246
medical 11, 32, 129,133, 135, 242, 244-45,
298, 306, 313
psychiatric 16, 25, 26-27, 29, 34,
35, 73, 98, 104,124,126,127, 133-35,138,158,165,177,221, 234, 266, 276, 284-85, 287, 345, 352, 355
psychiatric and discourse of truth 27 psychiatric as regulated and concerted
manipulation of power relations 20 asylum and medical theory 180-81
Principle
ol association 98
ol distraction 9 8 , 102
ol the "loreign will" (Falret; Cuislain) 147,
152, 168, 169
ol isolation 9 8 , 103, 112
ol ontogenesis phylogenesis 109
Prolits; see also Illnesses
Irom abnormalities, illegalities, and irregu
larities HO, 124 Prostitution 110-12
Psychiatrist(s); see also Asylum; Body; Power; Surgeon
factor ol the intensification of reality 132 master ol reality 132, 362
master of truth 131, 187
prolessorial dimension of speech 277
? Psychiatry; see also Scene(s)
pharmacological 342
as surplus power 132, 188, 216, 269, 340,
343; see also Asylum tautology test ol reality 268
power over madness and over abnormality 222
proto psychiatry, proto psychiatric 8, 25, 27, 29, 31-33, 94,173, 177, 181, 189, 191,233,362
Psychoanalysis
form of depsychiatrization 138, 342-44, 346 birth of first retreat of psychiatry 138
Psychology, of work 86 Psychopalhoiogy 86, 207 Psychopharmacology 346 Psychosurgery 342
Psy function 85-86, 189
Punishment, medication and 181, 185
Questioning, psychiatric (I'mterrogaloire) 184, 270-77
Relamilializalton ol the worker's lile in the nineteenth century 83-85
Religious orders 64, 70 Residues
historical, ol history 65, 109
ol disciplinary power the leeble minded, the
delinquent, the mentally ill 54 Responsibility 67, 86, 183, 273, 358, 361; see
also Questioning
Restraint 104-7, 120, 124, 143; . see also "No
restrain/"
Retardation, mental 205, 209-10, 212, 213
Schizophenic
paradigmatic figure ol antipsychiatry 358, 365 schizophrenia 266, 358, 361
Sciences of man 56, 73
Servants 5-6, 23, 40-41
Sexuality 124, 321-33
Shower 144,149-50, 158,159, 162-63,169,
176; see also Leu ret
Simulation 135-8, 141, 191, 251, 314, 315-16,
321, 340; see also Hysteria Sovereignty
non individualization of elements to which its relations apply 45
transformation of relationship into discipli nary power 22, 27
Slate apparatus (Appareil d'Fjat) 16, 18, 110 Strategy/strategies 14, 144, 166, 237, 354, 360;
see also Power, Scene(s)
Stupid/las sine morosis(T. Willis) 224 Stupidity 203-4; see also Madman
Subject of knowledge (connaissance) 238, 346 Subject function
within disciplinary relationship 55-56
within relationship ol sovereignty 44, 55 Subjection (assujettissemenl) 28, 29, 86, 178,
189, 362
Suggestion 312, 340; see also Hypnosis Supervisors 4-5, 49, 85, 102,103, 149, 150,
164, 182 Surgeon
as antithesis ol psychiatrist in medical field 188
"Symptomatic suspicion" (Escjuirol) 99, 118
Symptomatological scenario, organization of 3 0 9
Syphilis, cause ol general paralysis 266 System(s), disciplinary 86-87, 93,110-12,
115, 123,129,137, 235, 248, 250, 269, 276, 309, 362
Tabes, tabetic (Duchenne de Boulogne) 300-1, 325
Tactic
of putting to work 154 ol clothing (Ferrus) 153
Theater, as therapeutic site ol madness in classical age 10
Therapeutic process according to Pinel 3, 8, 40 medicinal 12
according to Rsquirol and 209
according to Seguin 207 Rights
Belhomme
imprescriptible (according to Falret) 135, 141
of juridical individual 58 Ritual; see also Scene(s)
general, of the asylum 146
Scene(s); see also Ritual
as ritual, strategy, and battle 9, 19-21 proto psychiatlie 25, 29, 31-3$
ol confrontation 9, 22, 24
of antipsychiatry 31
of cure 10, 29
Index of Notions 381
? 382 INDEX OF NOTIONS
Training (dressage) or the body 48 Trauma, traumatic
Charcot 315, 317-18, 322, 3-13
and hypnosis 314-15 Treatment
psychiatric 143-44, 153, 175, 218
removal or pleasure from 163-64 Truth
perlormative character of statement in game ol cure 132-33
game ol truth in delirium and ol delirium 35
game ol truth and lie tn symptom 136,138
Truth-demonstration 238 transition to technology of 246
Truth event 237-39, 241, 245, 246 as relation ot power 246
Violence 14-16, 18, 28, 29, 44,139,148-49, 204, 341, 351, 354, 355, 358, 361
Visit, ritual of 276
Work 42, 49, 51, 64, 68, 72-77, 81, 86, 107, 126-28, 152-56, 161, 180, 218; . fee also Tactic
Writing 48-52, 56,158, 218 instrument ot discipline 48 police practice 50
? Auxerre (asylum, hospital) 100-1, 118, 154, 171, 196
Beaujon (home, then hospital) 331 Bethlehem (hospital) 17, 119
Bicetre (asylum, then prison, then hospital) 7,
19, 28, 30, 36,105,118,119,145,154,157,158, 170,179,180,183,186,193-94,196,197,199, 212, 214-15, 218, 227, 228, 229, 290, 324
Bourg (asylum) 118
Castel d'Andorte (clinic) 117
Charenton (hospital and boarding house lor
the insane, and then "Esquirol hospital") 7,
145,158,159, 176,179,194,197, 263 Citeaux (abbey and order) 88
Clermont en-Oise (asylum) 125-26, 128, 140 Cluny (abbey and order) 64, 88, 119
Fitz James (clinic and community) 125, 140
Gheel (community) 120, 168, 197
Gorizia (hospital) 345, 347, 357, 365, 366 Grande-Chart reuse (abbey) 1
Hanwell (hospital) 119
Henri Roussel (hospital) 59
Hotel-Dieu (de Paris) (home, hospital) 120,
194,198, 293, 331
Issy les-Moulineaux (orthophrenic establishment) 227
Kingsley Hall (clinic) 31, 37, 345, 347, 366
La Borde (clinic) 357, 366
Leningrad (special psychiatric hospital) 365 Lincoln Asylum 119
Mettray (colony) 84, 91, 108, 120 Montmartre (Dr. Blanche's clinic) 120
Necker (hospital) 294, 324
Passy (Dr. Blanche's clinic) 12()
Pcntonville (prison) 73, 90
Perray-Vaucluse (asylum, community) 61, 196,
212, 218, 229
Petite Roquette (prison) 73, 90
Saint Alban (hospital) 59, 196, 357 Saint Antoine (suburb) 113, 121
Saint James (old folly, and then clinic or
C.
