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The Unconscious of History #1: Walls and Minds: The History of Psychiatric Asylums and Basaglia's Revolution
Introduction to the column: The Unconscious of History History does not end in textbooks. It survives in the institutions we inhabit, in the ways we think about care, in the language we use to describe those who suffer. "The Unconscious of History" was born from a simple conviction: that understanding how the past has built the psychological categories we use today — of normality, deviance, therapy, exclusion — is a necessary clinical and intellectual act, not a nostalgic exe
May 1512 min read


The Case of David Reimer: Psychological Theory, Ethics, and the Limits of Social Construction
Article written in collaboration with @neurodivergent_coaching Introduction The case of David Reimer remains one of the most influential and controversial case studies in the history of psychology. It is frequently cited in discussions of gender identity development, research ethics, trauma psychology, and the nature versus nurture debate. David Reimer was born biologically male in 1965, but after a catastrophic medical accident in infancy, he was raised as a girl under the g
Jan 89 min read
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