Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part One Reflections on the Interwar Period
- Part Two Legacies of the Great War
- 4 Religious Socialism, Peace, and Pacifism: The Case of Paul Tillich
- 5 No More Peace: The Militarization of Politics
- 6 The War’s Returns: Disabled Veterans in Britain and Germany, 1914-1939
- 7 The Impact of Total War on the Practice of British Psychiatry
- Part Three Visions of the Next War
- Part Four Projections and Practice
- Index
7 - The Impact of Total War on the Practice of British Psychiatry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2013
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part One Reflections on the Interwar Period
- Part Two Legacies of the Great War
- 4 Religious Socialism, Peace, and Pacifism: The Case of Paul Tillich
- 5 No More Peace: The Militarization of Politics
- 6 The War’s Returns: Disabled Veterans in Britain and Germany, 1914-1939
- 7 The Impact of Total War on the Practice of British Psychiatry
- Part Three Visions of the Next War
- Part Four Projections and Practice
- Index
Summary
It is generally accepted that modern warfare has exercised a significant influence on the evolution of psychiatry in the twentieth century. Stone, for example, argued that the identification of shell shock and attempts to treat the disorder were “an important and dynamic episode in the development of psychological medicine in Britain” in that they brought Freudian concepts of neurosis into “the mainstream of mental medicine and economic life and set psychiatry's field of practice squarely within the social fabric of industrial society.” Similarly, Merskey concluded from his study of shell shock that “the maturation of psychiatry occurred in the course of World War One; it then became a speciality with potential for the community.” Prominent figures like “T. A. Ross, D. K. Henderson and Millais Culpin,” he added, “all received an impetus to work outside the psychiatric hospitals from their own wartime experience.”
Whilst it was undoubtedly true that World War I drew physicians with an academic interest in psychology into the armed forces and that psychiatric questions became of paramount importance during the conflict, the expertise acquired by these individuals appears to have been dissipated. They did not continue to exercise a great influence over either military or civil medical services once the armistice had been signed. By contrast, World War II, which drew large numbers of civilians into the front line and created a total conflict, saw more lasting effects. Psychiatric specialists were recruited into the services in both selection and training roles, and also for the treatment of psychologically traumatized servicemen. In addition, it was feared that modern bombers would obliterate entire cities, undermining the fighting spirit of the workforce and their families. Psychiatrists were asked by the government to advise on how best to prepare for this onslaught and treat the effects of continuous aerial bombardment. Hence, in this essay we shall argue that although there were important influences on psychiatric practice as a result of World War I, these can be exaggerated and, furthermore, that it was World War II that had the greater and more enduring impact.
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- The Shadows of Total WarEurope, East Asia, and the United States, 1919–1939, pp. 129 - 148Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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