ABSTRACT

Born in Vienna in 1864, Bernard Hollander was a London-based psychiatrist. He is best known for being one of the main proponents of phrenology. This title, originally published in 1916, deals with "the nervous defects of children, and the various forms and degrees of mental and moral deficiency that may occur from infancy up to the age of twenty-one." Very much of its time, it looks at both what it calls the "subnormal" and the "supernormal" child, the causes of abnormality, and suggests ways of educating children in order to minimise their defects and maximise their abilities. This is an opportunity to enjoy a historical look at child psychology from the early twentieth century.

chapter I|28 pages

Causes of Abnormality

Effects of Heredity, Injury, and Disease

chapter II|17 pages

Idiocy and Imbecility

chapter III|17 pages

Feeble-Minded Children

chapter IV|16 pages

Backward Children

chapter V|16 pages

Character Defects in Children

Ill-Temper, Jealousy, Vindictiveness, Callousness, Cupidity, Bragging, Stubbornness, Impudence, Etc.

chapter VI|12 pages

Moral Weak-Mindedness

Youthful Criminals

chapter VII|14 pages

Nervous and Precocious Children

chapter VIII|24 pages

Nervous Disorders of Childhood

Epilepsy, Night Terrors, Chorea, Stammering, Morbid Shyness, Etc.

chapter IX|21 pages

Insanity in Childhood and Adolescence

chapter XI|15 pages

What to do With our Boys and Girls

Their Education and Choice of Pursuits

chapter XII|21 pages

The Moral Education of Children