Review published In: Historiographia Linguistica
Vol. 23:1/2 (1996) ► pp.182–187
Book review
Reader in the History of Aphasia: From Franz Gall to Norman Geschwind. Edited by Paul Eling
Reviewed by
Published online: 1 January 1996
https://doi.org/10.1075/hl.23.1-2.21whi
https://doi.org/10.1075/hl.23.1-2.21whi
References (20)
Bastian, Henry Charlton. 1869. “On the Various Forms of Loss of Speech in Cerebral Disease”. British Foreign Medical and Chirurgical Review 431.209–236, 470–492.
Clark, Edwin & Charles Donald O’Malley, eds. 1968. The Human Brain and Spinal Cord. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press.
Cole, Merritt Frindel & Monroe Cole, eds. 1971. Pierre Marie’s Papers on Speech Disorders. New York: Hafner.
. 1971. Selected Papers. Ed. by Aron Gurwitsch, Elias M. Goldstein & Warren Handel. The Hague: Mouton.
Harrington, Anne. 1987. Medicine, Mind and the Double Brain. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press.
Harris, Lauren Julius. 1991. “Cerebral Control for Speech in Right-Handers and Left-Handers: An analysis of the views of Paul Broca, his contemporaries, and his successors”. Brain and Language 401.1–50.
. 1993. “Broca on Cerebral Control for Speech in Right-Handers and Left-Handers: A note on translation and some further comments”. Ibid. 451.108–120.
Head, Henry. 1926. Aphasia and Kindred Disorders of Speech. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. (Repr., 1987.)
Hunter, Richard & Ida Macalpine, eds. 1982. Three Hundred Years of Psychiatry 1535–1860. Hartsdale: Carlisle.
Whitaker, Harry A. & Susan C. Etlinger. 1993. “Theodor Meynert’s Contribution to Classical 19th Century Aphasia Studies”. Brain and Language 451.560–571.
