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ویرایش: نویسندگان: Dully. Howard, Fleming. Charles سری: ISBN (شابک) : 9780307407672, 9780307381262 ناشر: Crown سال نشر: 2007 تعداد صفحات: 0 زبان: English فرمت فایل : EPUB (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 1 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب My lobotomy: a memoir به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب لوبوتومی من: خاطرات نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
At age 12, in 1960, Dully received a transorbital or ice pick
lobotomy from Dr. Walter Freeman, who invented the procedure,
making Dully an unfortunate statistic in medical historythe
youngest of the more than 10,000 patients who Freeman
lobotomized to cure their supposed mental illness. In this
brutally honest memoir, Dully, writing with Fleming (The
Ivory Coast), describes how he set out 40 years later to
find out why he was lobotomized, since he did not exhibit any
signs of mental instability at the time, and why,
postoperation, he was bounced between various institutions
and then slowly fell into a life of drug and alcohol abuse.
His journeyfirst described in a National Public Radio feature
in 2005finds Dully discovering how deeply he was the victim
of an unstable stepmother who systematically abused him and
who then convinced his distant father that a lobotomy was the
answer to Dully's acting out against her psychic torture. He
also investigates the strange career of Freemanwho wasn't a
licensed psychiatristincluding early acclaim by the New
York Times and cross-country trips hawking the operation
from his Lobotomobile. But what is truly stunning is Dully's
description of how he gained strength and a sense of
self-worth by understanding how both Freeman and his
stepmother were victims of their own family tragedies, and
how he managed to somehow forgive them for the wreckage they
caused in his life. (Sept.)
Copyright Reed Business Information, a division of Reed
Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
"The lobotomy, although terrible, was not the greatest injury
done to him. His greatest misfortune, as his own testimony
makes clear, was being raised by parents who could not give
him love. The lobotomy, he writes, made him feel like a
Frankenstein monster. But that's not quite right. By the age
of 12 he already felt that way. It's this that makes My
Lobotomy one of the saddest stories you'll ever
read."
William Grimes, The New York Times
"Dully's tale is a heartbreakingly sad story of a life
seriously, tragically interrupted. All Howard Dully wanted
was to be normal. His entire life has been a search for
normality. He did what he had to do to survive. This book is
his legacy, and it is a powerful one."
San Francisco Chronicle
"In My Lobotomy Howard Dully tells more of the story that so
many found gripping in a National Public Radio broadcast: how
his stepmother joined with a doctor willing to slice into his
brain with ice picks when he was all of 12 years old."
*New York Daily News
"[Dully's] memoir is vital and almost too disturbing to
bear-a piece of recent history that reads like science
fiction Dully, the only patient to ever request his file,
speaks eloquently. Its a voice to crash a server, and to
break your heart.
Cleveland Plain Dealer*
"The value of the book is in the indomitable spirit Dully
displays throughout his grueling sagaBy coming to grips with
his past and shining a light into the dark corners of his
medical records, Dully shows that regardless of what happened
to his brain, his heart and soul are ferociously
strong.
Chicago-Sun Times
"Plain-spoken, heart wrenching memoir ..."
San Jose Mercury News
"Gut-wrenching memoir by a man who was lobotomized at the age
of 12.
Assisted by journalist/novelist Fleming (After
Havana, 2003, etc.), Dully recounts a family
tragedy whose Sophoclean proportions he could only sketch in
his powerful 2005 broadcast on NPRs
All Things Considered.
In 1960, he writes, I was given a transorbital, or ice pick
lobotomy. My stepmother arranged it. My father agreed to it.
Dr. Walter Freeman, the father of the American lobotomy, told
me he was going to do some tests. It took ten minutes and
cost two hundred dollars. Fellow doctors called Freemans
technique barbaric: an ice picklike instrument was inserted
about three inches into each eye socket and twirled to sever
connections from the frontal lobe to the rest of the brain.
The procedure was intended to help curb a variety of
psychoses by muting emotional responses, but sometimes it
irreversibly reduced patients to a childlike state or (in 15%
of the operations Freeman performed) killed them outright.
Dullys ten-minute test did neither, but in some ways it had a
far crueler result, since it didnt end the unruly behavior
that had set his stepmother against him to begin with.
I spent the next forty years in and out of insane asylums,
jails, and halfway houses, he tells us. I was homeless,
alcoholic, and drug-addicted. I was lost. From all accounts,
there was no excuse for the lobotomy. Dully had never been
crazy, and his (not very) bad behavior sounds like the
typical acting-up of a child in desperate need of affection.
His stepmother responded with unrelenting abuse and neglect,
his father allowed her to demonize his son and never admitted
his complicity in the lobotomy; Freeman capitalized on their
monumental dysfunction. Its a tale of epic horror, and while
Dullys courage in telling it inspires awe, readers are left
to speculate about what drove supposedly responsible adults
to such unconscionable acts.
A profoundly disturbing survivors tale."
*Kirkus
"...Hard to put down."
The Record*
Content: June --
Lou --
762 Edgewood --
Trouble --
Dr. Freeman --
Dully, Howard (F: Rodney L.) --
My lobotomy --
Big enough and ugly enough --
Asylym --
Rancho Linda --
Agnews. Again --
Homeless --
Barbara --
Journey --
Archives --
Broadcast --
One last word.