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The purpose of this book is twofold: first, to describe the history of epilepsy in its modern era, from 1860–2020; second, to explore the reasons for the directions that epilepsy has taken. Epilepsy is much more than a simple medical illness. It has attained a symbolism (an ‘idea’) which has become deeply embedded in the culture of mankind. There have been powerful medical, scientific, societal and personal currents shaping its course, and this book attempts to take a broad perspective on its history, incorporating all four elements. The influence of science is one often overlooked by historians, and yet has played a crucial role. The hegemony of capitalism in the long twentieth century, and the influence of society and culture have equally been often ignored in scientific and medical treatises, and yet have been fundamental in the setting of the epilepsy agenda. The personal story is told through personal testimony and the creative arts which can provide deep insights into attitudes and concerns. Robert Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy is taken as a model for the approach taken. The complexities and inherent biases of the book are also described.
Epilepsy has a fascinating history. To the medical historian Oswei Temkin it was 'the paradigm of the suffering of both body and soul in disease'. It is justifiably considered a window on brain function. And yet its story is more than simply a medical narrative, but one influenced also by scientific, societal and personal themes. Written for a medical and non-medical readership, this book describes the major developments in epilepsy between 1860–2020, a turbulent era in which science dominated as an explanatory model, medical theories and practices steered an erratic course, and societal attitudes and approaches to epilepsy fluctuated dramatically. In the middle of this maelstrom was the person with epilepsy at the mercy of social attitudes and legislation, and at times harmed as well as helped by medicine and science. So entangled is the history that intriguingly, as an entity, epilepsy may now be thought not even to exist.
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