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A Transnational Perspective on Psychosurgery: Beyond Portugal and the United States

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF THE NEUROSCIENCES
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 335-354

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/0964704X.2013.862123

Keywords

global; transnational; international; leucotomy; lobotomy; psychosurgery

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The history of psychosurgery is most often recounted as a narrative wherein Portuguese and American physicians play the leading role. It is a traditional narrative in which the United States and, at times, Portugal are central in the development and spread of psychosurgery. Here we largely abandon the archetypal narrative and provide one of the first transnational accounts of psychosurgery to demonstrate the existence of a global psychosurgical community in which more than 40 countries participated, bolstered, critiqued, modified and heralded the treatment. From its inception in 1935 until its decline in the mid-1960s, psychosurgery was performed on almost all continents. Rather than being a phenomenon isolated to the United States and Portugal, it became a truly transnational movement.

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