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Hardcover Battle for the Mind Book

ISBN: 075222199X

ISBN13: 9780752221991

Battle for the Mind

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

$8.09
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Book Overview

The terrible physical effects of sending men into battle have always been self-evident, but only in modern times have the psychological effects been examined. Killing, watching friends die, leading... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Related Subjects

Modern (16th-21st Centuries)

Customer Reviews

1 rating

A compelling study of the effects of war on the human mind.

The book focuses largely on the First World War, where the term shell shock originated and and attempts were first made to understand it's concept.The book recounts, through many personal stories how the whole notion of mental suffering was often regarded as a form of cowardice, with many innocents suffering the ultimate punishment/shame, purely due to a lack of understanding of the mental and physical stress that war can cause, whilst authorities seemed incapable of showing compassion for fear of inducing a revolt in their own forces.Distressingly, the author recounts how doctors working for the military were ordered to work with the sole intention of getting their patients well enough to be able to send them back to the frontline, where all the original triggers of shell shock awaited.Incidents are reported of soldiers, who would have no reason to suffer mental illness in everday life, displaying the most bizarre symptoms after being exposed to the continuous horrors of war.Holden goes on to detail how the understanding of Shell Shock evolved during the World Wars largely due to the perserverance and hard work of a number of doctors who often experimented with nothing more than trial and error methods.It goes on to explain how further conflicts in the 20th Century, ncluding Vietnam and the Gulf War have to some extent allowed the understanding of the stresses of war to become almost scientifically identified, to the point where it's now generally understood what sorts of conditions and how many hours of combat the average human can take in war.
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