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LECTURE. "The Classical Symptoms of Hysteria." IV. Dr. Pierre Janet. Harvard Medical School Boston...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar | 10/20/1906 | See Source »

LECTURE. "The Classical Symptoms of Hysteria." III. Dr. Pierre Janet. Harvard Medical School, Boston, 8 P. M. Open to teachers and students of medical schools in Boston, to members of the medical profession, and to teachers of psychology...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar | 10/20/1906 | See Source »

...course of about fifteen lectures on "The Classical Symptoms of Hysteria" will be given at the Medical School, beginning next week, by Professor Pierre Janet of Paris, and continued until the last week of November. The lectures will probably be given in the evening at the rate of three each week. A definite announcement of dates and hours will be posted at the several medical schools and the Boston Medical Library. The lectures will be open to all teachers and students of medical schools in Boston, to members of the medical profession generally, and to teachers of psychology. Advanced students...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Classical Symptoms of Hysteria" | 10/13/1906 | See Source »

Three new appointments to lectureships for 1906-07 are announced. The lecturers with their subjects, are as follows: Professor Paul Vinogradoff, of Oxford University, "Comparative Ancient Law"; Professor Pierre Janet, of the University of Paris, "The Great Symptoms of Hysteria"; Major Leonard Darwin, "The Foundation for Lectures on Political Economy." Professor Vinogradoff has been Professor of Jurisprudence at Oxford since 1903, and was formerly professor of history at the University of Moscow. His publications include: "The Rise of Feudalism in Lombard Italy", "Inquiries in the Social History of England", and "Villainage in England...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Three New Lecturers Appointed | 6/16/1906 | See Source »

...Corner at Dodsley's," on the tendencies of contemporary literature to dispense altogether with literary men, are animated and amusing. Mr. Harte says: "The days of literary men in literature is over. It is now the triumphal hour of the imbecile millionaire, the rich society woman, who has nerves, hysteria, a vast deal of impudence, a store of proverbial piatitude, and a continual itch for notoriety; actresses that have more gowns than brains; English lords and ladies, and some assinine royalities. Every fool in the universe, with money enough to pay a printer's bill, has published a book...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New England Magazine. | 12/5/1891 | See Source »

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