Psychiatrists, Addicted Patients, and Institutions of Care: European Histories from the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
The Social History of Alcohol and Drugs, Volume 39, Number 2, Fall 2025
Guest Editors’ Introduction
Psychiatrists, Addicted Patients, and Institutions of Care: European Histories from the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Anatole Le Bras and Marianna Scarfone
Iatrogenic Morphinomania and Professional Issues in the Field of French Psychiatry at the End of the Nineteenth Century
Zoë Dubus
Treatment of Alcoholism in La Source (Paris Suburbs, 1902–1911): A History of a Private Medical Institution
Victoria Afanasyeva
“PS: Morphine!” An Addict’s Experiences of Negotiating Morphine Treatment at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century
Rebecka Klette
Difficult Patients: Drug Users and Their Treatment in Early Twentieth-Century Greece
Kostis Gkotsinas
Soldiers, Alcohol, and Insanity at Richmond Asylum, 1860s–1900s
Amy Milne-Smith
Between Rejection and Acceptance: The Paradox of Alcoholic Patients in Psychiatric Institutions (Brussels, 1950s–1970s)
Samuel Dal Zilio

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