71 résultats
46607Félix Alcan.1911.In-8 br.302 p. Etat correct.Rares soulignures.Couv.défraichie.
25467Nice, A.D.I.A., 1945. 25 x 33, 89 pp., 8 planches couleurs en trichromie phototypie sur B.K.F. de Rives, reproductions en N/B et texte sur vélin de Renage à la forme, broché sous étui, non coupé, couverture rempliée, très bon état.
First English edition, 8vo (210 x 130 mm), lv, [1], 288pp., with the half-title, faint unobtrusive stamp to title page, 2 engraved plates, one folding table, some light browning and spotting, some minor water-staining more so to the last ten leaves, later maroon cloth, lower hinge torn. The French physician Philippe Pinel (1745-1826), who founded the French School of Psychiarry at Hospice de la Salp?triere, has been described as 'the father of modern psychiatry'. "Pinel was among the first to treat insane humanely; he dispensed with chains and placed his patients under the care of specially selected physicians. Garrison considered the above book one of the foremost medical classics, giving as it did a great impetus to humanitarian treatment of the insane."?Garrison-Morton. The first edition of his Traite medico-philosophique sur l'alienation mentale; ou la manie appeared in 1801. Provenance: Formerly in the library of the Birmingham Medical Institute. Hook & Norman, Haskell F. Norman Library II, 1704; Hunter & Macalpine, pp. 602-610; Garrison-Morton, 4922; Wellcome IV, p. 388.
19783Paralysie générale - Démence sénile - Démence précoce. Lyon. Legendre. 1912. Grand in-8 (25x16). 353 pages. Broché (partiellement décousu).
Book is in excellent condition. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no blemishes, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. 240 pages, loaded with b&w prints, some full page, full color, plus photos of salons, workshops, etc. History of the artist from 1863 through chapters of Indecision, Formation of a new aesthetic, Kristiania and Berlin, Years of crisis and success, and a Stranger to the World, ending in 1944.
19536314Neuchatel/ Paris, Delachaux/ Niestlé, 1953 ; in-8, broché ; 212 pp. , (4) pp.
3440in 8 broché,faux-titre,frontispice(portrait de Quentin de LA TOUR)titre,54 pages,1 feuillet de table des matières, légères rousseurs sur la couverture trace de pliure angle inférieur droit de la page 46 à la fin du volume édition Vega 1932 édition originale,peu courant
Ex-library copy with the usual stamps, stickers, etc. Binding is solid and text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. Library reference copy with sharp corners, uncreased covers, very clean.
79,[1]pp., recent marbled wrappers, printed paper label on upper cover. Consists of a list of members of the Committee of Visitors, report of the visiting justices (F. H. Dickinson, chairman... [et al.]), report of the superintendent (Robert Boyd), obituary and statistical statements and financial statements (George William Gunn). Copac listing the Wellcome library copy only.
0526123370.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
097674418X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
27866Paris, Robert Laffont, 1981. 13 x 21, 344 pp., broché, bon état.
First edition, 4to (276 x 220 mm), large paper copy, xx, [21]-227, [1, errata]pp., engraved frontispiece of the North front vie of the Retreat, quite heavily offset onto title as usual, small oval oil stain to lower blank margin of title and prelims, loss to top corner of P1 removing one letter from margin header, 2 engraved ground plans, nineteenth-century half calf, marbled boards, leather spine label, slightly rubbed. In 1791 a Quaker woman, Hannah Miles, died in suspicious circumstances in the York Asylum (later Bootham Park Hospital). William Tuke was appalled, and when his daughter Ann asked why there could not be an establishment for such persons within the Quaker Society he was immediately taken with the idea. His wife hated the whole idea and the Society of Friends and initially disapproved of the whole scheme, but despite all obstacles the basic principle of The Retreat was formerly laid down. It was to be 1796 before The Retreat first opened its doors to patients and the first three arrived in May of that year. At the time of The Retreat's foundation many patients in other institutions were chained or manacled to starve them to reduce their strength. Many madhouses were filled with stench and patients were cruelly beaten to fit in with the common philosophy that the rule of fear was the only way to control patients. Tuke's philosophy was vastly different and, in 1813 his grandson Samuel published this book. It was to have a profound effect on the conceptions of how to deal with the mentally ill, and was instrumental in bringing about reforms at York Asylum. With intense interest aroused the House of Commons set up a Select Committee to report on 'Madhouses' in 1815 as a direct result. Tuke gave evidence to a second report and his 'mild method' of looking after the mentally ill eventually won support and gave rise to new legislation. The Retreat was to evolve new and far reaching methods of humane treatment of the mentally ill and leave a lasting impression on the theory and practice of other establishments both nationally and internationally. Garrison-Morton, 4925.1; Hunter & Macalpine, pp. 684-90; Norman, 2109.
1823665091 brochure in-8, Imprimerie de J.-B. Henry, Valenciennes, 1823, 3 ff. blancs, 1 f., 24 pp., 1f. n. ch. et 3 ff. n. ch. avec 2 planches hors texte
0365859605.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0366361511.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1992015500Paris Grasset 1992 Broché Dédicacé par l'auteur
1990015501Paris Grasset 1990 In-8 Broché Dédicacé par l'auteur
Index. Name at top of front pastedown. Wear and small loss top edge of front and back cover. Loss to top of spine and base of spine bumped. Top edges greyed with dust marks.
First edition, 8vo (200 x 130 mm), xviii, [2], 451, [1]pp., frontis., portrait, numerous illustrs., orig. blue cloth lettered in gilt, a little rubbed, gilt stamp of the Birmingham Medical Institute to base of spine, a very good copy. Lyttelton Stewart Forbes Winslow (1844-1913) was a British psychiatrist famous for his involvement in the Jack the Ripper and Georgina Weldon cases during the late Victorian era. Provenance: Presentation label of Christopher Marlin to the Birmingham Medical Institute on front paste-down.
19225441Berlin, Verlag von Julius Springer, 1922 ; in-8, broché ; 4 ff. , 113 pp., (2) pp. de catalogue de l’éditeur.