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Disconnexion syndromes in animals and man (1965)

© 1994 John Benjamins Publishing Company

© 1994 John Benjamins Publishing Company

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Introduction xi
  5. Franz Joseph Gall (1758-1828)
  6. Letter to Mr. Joseph F. von Retzer on prodromus he has completed on the functions of the human and animal brain (1798) 17
  7. Paul Broca (1824-1880)
  8. Notes on the site of the faculty of articulated language, followed by an observation of aphemia (1861) 41
  9. Aphemia, lasting twenty-one years, produced by chronic and progressive softening of the second and third convolutions of the superior layer of the left frontal lobe 46
  10. Complete atrophy of the insular lobe and of the third convolution of the frontal lobe with preservation of the intelligence and the faculty of articulated language 50
  11. On the site of the faculty of articulated language (1865) 56
  12. Carl Wernicke (1848-1905)
  13. The aphasia symptom-complex 69
  14. Some new studies on aphasia (1886) 90
  15. Henry Charlton Bastian (1837-1915)
  16. The Lumleian Lectures 113
  17. Further problems in regard to the localization of higher cerebral functions (1880) 120
  18. John Hughlings Jackson (1835-1911)
  19. On affections of speech from disease of the brain (1897) 145
  20. Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
  21. On aphasia (1891) 181
  22. Jules Dejerine (1849-1917)
  23. Contribution to the anatomical-pathological and clinical study of the different varieties of word blindness (1892) 205
  24. Pierre Marie (1853-1940)
  25. The third left frontal convolution plays no special role in the function of language (1906) 231
  26. On the function of language 242
  27. Arnold Pick (1851-1924)
  28. From thinking to speech (1913) 261
  29. Agrammatism (1931) 268
  30. Henry Head (1861-1940)
  31. Cerebral localization (1926) 289
  32. The diagram makers (1926) 304
  33. Kurt Goldstein (1878-1965)
  34. On aphasia (1910) 329
  35. The problem of the origin of symptoms in brain damage (1948) 334
  36. On naming and pseudo-naming (1946) 336
  37. The organismic approach to aphasia (1948) 344
  38. On aphasia (1927) 346
  39. Norman Geschwind (1926-1984)
  40. Disconnexion syndromes in animals and man (1965) 361
  41. Index 389
Reader in the History of Aphasia
This chapter is in the book Reader in the History of Aphasia
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