Panic Diaries

Panic Diaries
Title Panic Diaries PDF eBook
Author Jackie Orr
Publisher Duke University Press
Pages 375
Release 2006-03-01
Genre Psychology
ISBN 0822387360

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Part cultural history, part sociological critique, and part literary performance, Panic Diaries explores the technological and social construction of individual and collective panic. Jackie Orr looks at instances of panic and its “cures” in the twentieth-century United States: from the mass hysteria following the 1938 radio broadcast of H. G. Wells’s War of the Worlds to an individual woman swallowing a pill to control the “panic disorder” officially recognized by the American Psychiatric Association in 1980. Against a backdrop of Cold War anxieties over atomic attack, Orr highlights the entanglements of knowledge and power in efforts to reconceive panic and its prevention as problems in communication and information feedback. Throughout, she reveals the shifting techniques of power and social engineering underlying the ways that scientific and social scientific discourses—including crowd psychology, Cold War cybernetics, and contemporary psychiatry—have rendered panic an object of technoscientific management. Orr, who has experienced panic attacks herself, kept a diary of her participation as a research subject in clinical trials for the Upjohn Company’s anti-anxiety drug Xanax. This “panic diary” grounds her study and suggests the complexity of her desire to track the diffusion and regulation of panic in U.S. society. Orr’s historical research, theoretical reflections, and biographical narrative combine in this remarkable and compelling genealogy, which documents the manipulation of panic by the media, the social sciences and psychiatry, the U.S. military and government, and transnational drug companies.

The Panic Diaries

The Panic Diaries
Title The Panic Diaries PDF eBook
Author Jeanne Jordan
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2004
Genre Anxiety
ISBN 9781569754184

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Did your panic attack make you feel alone, confused, maybe even a little bit crazy? Ours did! But they also made us wonder: What the heck are panic attacks? What causes them and, more importantly, what can we do to stop them? As journalists by trade, we set out to get the facts and tell the story. Our journey took us from Greek mythology to modern technology and, quite frankly, we couldn't believe what we found... Lots of people have had panic attacks -- people like Sigmund Freud (yes, that Sigmund Freud) and Naomi Judd -- and about 26 million Americans. So we talked to them (well, not all of them) and recorded their panic stories along with our own. What we discovered was the frightful, sometimes hilarious truth about panic attacks. Book jacket.

The Panic Diaries

The Panic Diaries
Title The Panic Diaries PDF eBook
Author Jeanne Jordan
Publisher Godsfield Press
Pages 160
Release 2005
Genre Anxiety
ISBN 9781841812830

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As panic attacks reach epidemic proportions in the U.S., two brave women journey to the front line in the battle against panic and return with stories of courage, anxiety, recovery, and just general craziness in a crazy world.

Panic Diaries

Panic Diaries
Title Panic Diaries PDF eBook
Author Jacqueline Tracy Orr
Publisher
Pages 820
Release 1999
Genre
ISBN

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Panic Diaries

Panic Diaries
Title Panic Diaries PDF eBook
Author Jackie Orr
Publisher
Pages 392
Release 2002
Genre
ISBN

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Diary of a Man in Despair

Diary of a Man in Despair
Title Diary of a Man in Despair PDF eBook
Author Friedrich Reck
Publisher New York Review of Books
Pages 273
Release 2013-02-12
Genre History
ISBN 1590175867

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Hailed as one of the most important works on the Hitler period, this is an “astonishing, compelling, and unnerving” portrait of life in Nazi Germany between 1936 and 1944—from a man who nearly shot Hitler himself (The New Yorker) Friedrich Reck might seem an unlikely rebel against Nazism. Not just a conservative but a rock-ribbed reactionary, he played the part of a landed gentleman, deplored democracy, and rejected the modern world outright. To Reck, the Nazis were ruthless revolutionaries in Gothic drag, and helpless as he was to counter the spell they had cast on the German people, he felt compelled to record the corruptions of their rule. The result is less a diary than a sequence of stark and astonishing snapshots of life in Germany between 1936 and 1944. We see the Nazis at the peak of power, and the murderous panic with which they respond to approaching defeat; their travesty of traditional folkways in the name of the Volk; and the author’s own missed opportunity to shoot Hitler. This riveting book is not only, as Hannah Arendt proclaimed it, “one of the most important documents of the Hitler period,” but a moving testament of a decent man struggling to do the right thing in a depraved world.

Culture and Panic Disorder

Culture and Panic Disorder
Title Culture and Panic Disorder PDF eBook
Author Devon E. Hinton
Publisher Stanford University Press
Pages 297
Release 2009-03-13
Genre Medical
ISBN 0804771111

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Psychiatric classifications created in one culture may not be as universal as we assume, and it is difficult to determine the validity of a classification even in the culture in which it was created. Culture and Panic Disorder explores how the psychiatric classification of panic disorder first emerged, how medical theories of this disorder have shifted through time, and whether or not panic disorder can actually be diagnosed across cultures. In this breakthrough volume a distinguished group of medical and psychological anthropologists, psychiatrists, psychologists, and historians of science provide ethnographic insights as they investigate the presentation and generation of panic disorder in various cultures. The first available work with a focus on the historical and cross-cultural aspects of panic disorders, this book presents a fresh opportunity to reevaluate Western theories of panic that were formerly taken for granted.