Mical Raz, M.D., Ph.D., is a physician and historian of medicine. She is author of The Lobotomy Letters: The Making of American Psychosurgery.
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Description
"A fascinating and disturbing study of how psychology created an unflattering and close to insulting picture of the poor. . . . A superb, groundbreaking study. Excellent. Essential. All levels/libraries." -- CHOICE "Address[es] the role of mental health experts in shaping public policy in twentieth-century America." -- Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences "An important contribution . . . [and] a valuable resource." -- Journal of Southern History "One of this book's many strengths is its recognition that the war on poverty was really a war on what well-meaning liberals imagined poverty had done to the lives of the poor." -- Bulletin of the History of Medicine "Should be read by any scholar of American post-war history seeking better to understand 'the risks of using seemingly neutral theories of child development and mental health in attempts to address social problems' (p. 175)." -- Social History of Medicine

