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  Vol. 58 No. 4, April 2001 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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  History of Neurology: Neurology Was There
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Neurology Was There

1910

George K. York, MD; David A. Steinberg, MD

Arch Neurol. 2001;58:663-665.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

INTRODUCTION

The year 1910 saw the ascendance of modernism as a scientific, social, and artistic movement. Cubism took the art world by storm. Stravinsky's Firebird Suite was performed in Paris. The German Expressionist group Die Brücke held its first exhibition in Berlin. Marie Curie and J. J. Thompson probed the depth of the atom. Neurology was there.


THE PLACE OF PSYCHOANALYSIS IN NEUROLOGY

In 1910, Freudian psychoanalysis, that most modern of theories, provoked a lively debate among neurologists. Ernest Jones,1 Freud's Welsh colleague and biographer, published an outline of psychoanalysis describing the principles of repression, word association, dream analysis, and free association. At the 36th annual meeting of the American Neurological Association (ANA), held in Washington, DC, from May 2 through May 4, 1910, James J. Putnam,2 professor of neurology at Harvard, read a paper describing his personal experience using Freudian psychoanalysis to treat a series of patients. He . . . [Full Text of this Article]

SYPHILIS

NEUROLOGY AND PUBLIC HEALTH

NEUROPHYSIOLOGY

CEREBRAL LOCALIZATION

From the Department of Neurology, Kaiser Permanente Stockton Medical Center, Stockton, Calif (Dr York); and the Såa Institute, Fiddletown, Calif (Drs York and Steinberg).

Corresponding author and reprints: George K. York, MD, 21201 Ostrom Rd, Fiddletown, CA 95629 (e-mail: gkyork@ucdavis.edu).



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