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HAWAII STATE PUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM
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Sternburg, Janet, author.
Subjects
Sternburg, Janet -- Family -- Health.
Frontal lobotomy -- Patients -- United States -- Biography.
Frontal lobotomy -- History.
Psychosurgery -- History.
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Sternburg, Janet, author.
by title:
White matter : a mem...
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White matter : a memoir of family and medicine / Janet Sternburg.
by
Sternburg, Janet, author.
Portland, Oregon : Hawthorne Books & Literary Arts, c2014.
Subjects
Sternburg, Janet -- Family -- Health.
Frontal lobotomy -- Patients -- United States -- Biography.
Frontal lobotomy -- History.
Psychosurgery -- History.
ISBN:
9780989360494 (paperback) :
0989360490 (paperback)
Description:
xiii, 238 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
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Summary:
"White Matter: A Memoir of Family and Medicine is the story of a Bostonian close-knit Jewish working-class family of five sisters and one brother and the impact they and their next generation endured due to the popularization of lobotomy during the 20th century. When Janet Sternburg's grandfather abandoned his family, and her uncle, Bennie, became increasing mentally ill, Sternburg's mother and aunts had to bind together and make crucial decisions for the family's survival. Two of the toughest and most heartrending familial decisions they made were to have Bennie undergo a lobotomy to treat his schizophrenia and later to have youngest sister, Francie, undergo the same procedure to treat severe depression. Woven into Sternburg's story are notable figures that influenced the family as well as the entire medical field. In 1949, Egas Moniz was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine for developing the lobotomy, and in the three years that followed his acceptance of the award, more Americans underwent the surgery than during the previous 14 years. By the early 1950s, Walter Freeman developed an alternate technique for lobotomy, which he proselytized during his travels throughout the country in a van he dubbed the "Lobotomobile." The phrase "prefrontal lobotomy" was common currency growing up in Janet Sternburg's family and in White Matter she details this scientific discovery that disconnects the brain's white matter, leaving a person without feelings, and its undeserved legitimization and impact on her family. She writes as a daughter consumed with questions about her mother and aunts--all well meaning women who decided their siblings' mental health issues would be best treated with lobotomies. By the late 1970s, the surgical practice was almost completely out of favor, but its effects left patients and their families with complicated legacies as well as a stain on American medical history"--Provided by publisher.
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Hawaii State Library
Business, Science & Technology
617.481 St
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