- A faith in science: Gardner Murphy and parapsychology
- Early state socialism and eugenics: Premarital medical certificates in Czechoslovakia, East Germany, and Poland in the aftermath of World War II
- The environmental counter-history of liberalism: A formidable challenge?
- British criminology, undercover policing, and racist attacks: Notes on the ‘law and order’ information infrastructure
- Ethnopsychology in the Bismarck Archipelago: Richard Thurnwald and the visual anthropology of German colonialism
- In the shadow of the tree: The diagrammatics of relatedness in genealogy, anthropology, and genetics as epistemic, cultural, and political practice
- Who reads Renan
- The specter of authenticity: Social science after the deconstruction of Romanticism
- On heritage pharmacology: Rethinking ‘heritage pathologies’ as tropes of care
- Low on the Kinsey scale: Homosexuality in Swedish and Finnish sex research, 1960s–1990s
- Finding modernity in England’s past: Social anthropology and the remaking of social history in Britain, 1959–77*
- The visualization of autism: Filming children at the Maudsley Hospital, London, 1957–8
- Film, observation, and the mind
- The discovery of synchrony: By means of the projector as a scientific instrument
- Two left turns to science: Gramsci and Du Bois on the emancipatory potential of the social sciences
- Transformativity: The malleable foundations of social theory
- Taxonomical lives: The making of social divisions in the Swedish press during the golden age of social democracy, 1945–76
- Reanimating experimental psychology: Media archaeology, Hugo Münsterberg, and the ‘Testing the Mind’ film series
- William Sheldon, Aldous Huxley, and the Dartington connection: Body typing schemes offer a new path to a utopian future
- Horizons of Passion: Hermeneutics as fusion or as fracture
- Mother-blaming revisited: Gender, cinematography, and infant research in the heyday of psychoanalysis
- Behavior takes form: Tracing the film image in scientific research
- Mental recovery, citizenship roles, and the Mental After-Care Association, 1879–1928
- Contrary to reason: Documentary film-making and alternative psychotherapies
- A diagrammatics of race: Samuel George Morton’s ‘American Golgotha’ and the contest for the definition of the young field of anthropology
- ‘Intelligible to the mind and pleasing to the eye’: Mapping out kinship in British family directories (1660–1830)
- Kinship acknowledged and denied: Collecting and publishing kinship materials in 19th-century settler-colonial states
- I never promised you a rose garden.… When landscape architecture becomes a laboratory for the Anthropocene
- How family charts became Mendelian: The changing content of pedigrees and its impact on the consolidation of genetic theory
- Sin embodied: Priest-psychiatrist Asser Stenbäck and the psychosomatic approach to human problems
- Religion and civilization in the sociology of Norbert Elias: Fantasy–reality balances in long-term perspective
- Racial anthropology in Turkey and transnational entanglements in the making of scientific knowledge: Seniha Tunakan’s academic trajectory, 1930s–1970s
- Mind and knowledge in the early thought of Franz Boas, 1887–1904
- Stressing the ‘body electric’: History and psychology of the techno-ecologies of work stress
- Freud in Cambridge Review Symposium
- Criticism as self-analysis
- Fort/Da/Freud
- A public inquiry into Freud’s influence upon Cambridge
- Freud in Cambridge: An institutional romance?
- Reply to my commentators – Thinking with Forrester: dreams, true crimes, and histories of change
- Quentin Skinner, contextual method and Machiavelli’s understanding of liberty
- Confronting the field: Tylor’s Anahuac and Victorian thought on human diversity
- The ultimate think tank: The rise of the Santa Fe Institute libertarian*
- Social science and Marxist humanism beyond collectivism in Socialist Romania
- Documenting insanity: Paperwork and patient narratives in psychiatric history
- The conundrum of the psychological interface: On the problems of bridging the biological and the social
- Reviewer Acknowledgement 2021
- Lesbian and bisexual women’s experiences of aversion therapy in England
- Alfred Vierkandt’s notion of the social group
- Modern European sexological and orientalist assimilations of medieval Islamicate ‘ilm al-bah to erotology
- Measuring non-Han bodies: Anthropometry, colonialism, and biopower in China’s south-western borderland in the 1930s and 1940s
- ‘You never need an analyst with Bobby around’: The mid-20th-century human sciences in Sondheim and Furth’s musical Company
- The pragmatic use of metaphor in empirical psychology
- Psychoanalysis and anti-racism in mid-20th-century America: An alternative angle of vision
- From class origins to individual psychopathology: Spousal murder according to state socialist Czechoslovak criminology
- From the margins to the NICE guidelines: British clinical psychology and the development of cognitive behaviour therapy for psychosis, 1982–2002
- ‘A troublesome girl is pushed through’: Morality, biological determinism, resistance, resilience, and the Canadian child migration schemes, 1883–1939
- Revisiting the ‘Darwin–Marx correspondence’: Multiple discovery and the rhetoric of priority
- On the assumption of self-reflective subjectivity
- The emergence of the idea of ‘the welfare state’ in British political discourse
- Simulating Marx: Herbert A. Simon’s cognitivist approach to dialectical materialism
- Demons of the mind: The ‘psy’ sciences and film in the long 1960s
- A code for care and control: The PIN as an operator of interoperability in the Nordic welfare state
- An ‘ingenious system of practical contacts’: Historical origins and development of the Institute of Child Welfare Research at Columbia University’s Teachers College (1922–36)
- From In Two Minds to MIND: The circulation of ‘anti-psychiatry’ in British film and television during the long 1960s
- The idea of an ethically committed social science
- Rahel Jaeggi’s theory of alienation
- ‘Flash houses’: Public houses and geographies of moral contagion in 19th-century London
- Psychedelic psychodrama: Raising and expanding consciousness in Jane Arden’s The Other Side of the Underneath (1973)
- Discourses on im/migrants, ethnic minorities, and infectious disease: Fifty years of tuberculosis reporting in the United Kingdom
- Cultivating trust, producing knowledge: The management of archaeological labour and the making of a discipline
- Race in post-war science: The Swiss case in a global context
- From cohort to community: The emotional work of birthday cards in the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development, 1946–2018
- Frederick Antal and the Marxist challenge to art history
- ‘Somewhere between science and superstition’: Religious outrage, horrific science, and The Exorcist (1973)
- Psychometric origins of depression
- Fairbairn, Winnicott, and Guntrip on the social significance of schizoids
- Not merely the absence of disease: A genealogy of the WHO’s positive health definition
- On some antecedents of behavioural economics
- Madness, virtue, and ecology: A classical Indian approach to psychiatric disturbance
- Writing the history of postcolonial and transcultural psychiatry in Africa
- Phrenology and the average person, 1840–1940
- Psychological theory as administrative politics: Boris Lomov’s systems approach in the context of the Soviet science establishment
- Talking therapy: The allopathic nihilation of homoeopathy through conceptual translation and a new medical language
- Recomposing persons: Scavenging and storytelling in a birth cohort archive
- After the normal
- Normal enough? Krafft-Ebing, Freud, and homosexuality
- Reviewer Acknowledgement 2020
- ‘We have come to be destroyed’: The ‘extraordinary’ child in science fiction cinema in early Cold War Britain
- Psychoanalysis and the antinomies of an archaeologist: Andrea Carandini, the ruins of Rome, and the writing of history
- Félida, doubled personality, and the ‘normal state’ in late 19th-century French psychology
- Normality: A collection of essays
- The past of predicting the future: A review of the multidisciplinary history of affective forecasting
- ‘The intelligent and the rest’: British Mensa and the contested status of high intelligence
- Conversion disorder and/or functional neurological disorder: How neurological explanations affect ideas of self, agency, and accountability
- Introduction: Contested narratives of the mind and the brain: Neuro/psychological knowledge in popular debates and everyday life
- Hat sizes and craniometry: Professional know-how and scientific knowledge
- Ideology and science: The story of Polish psychology in the communist period
- Thinking in, with, across, and beyond cases with John Forrester
- Continuity through change: State social research and sociology in Portugal
- Neurobiological limits and the somatic significance of love: Caregivers’ engagements with neuroscience in Scottish parenting programmes
- Mothering in the frame: Cinematic microanalysis and the pathogenic mother, 1945–67
- A history of the data present
- The synthesis of consciousness and the latent life of the mind: Philosophy, psychopathology, and ‘cryptopsychism’ in fin-de-siècle France
- Freedom and addiction in four discursive registers: A comparative historical study of values in addiction science
- ‘The Revolution is to the human mind what the African sun is to vegetation’: Revolution, heat, and the normal school project
- Types, norms, and normalisation: Hormone research and treatments in Italy, Argentina, and Brazil, c. 1900–50
- Limitless? Imaginaries of cognitive enhancement and the labouring body
- An even-handed debate? The sexed/gendered controversy over laterality genes in British psychology, 1970s–1990s
- A ‘commonsense’ psychoanalysis: Listening to the psychosocial dreamer in interwar Glasgow psychiatry
- Parallel structures: André Leroi-Gourhan, Claude Lévi-Strauss, and the making of French structural anthropology
- If p0, then 1: The impossibility of thinking out cases
- ‘This scene is itself living’: Buildings as landscapes in transatlantic human geography, 1870–1970
- Boundaries of reasoning in cases: The visual psychoanalysis of René Spitz
- Renegades or liberals? Recent reflections on the Boasian legacies in American anthropology
- Histories of sexology today: Reimagining the boundaries of scientia sexualis
- The unexpected American origins of sexology and sexual science: Elizabeth Osgood Goodrich Willard, Orson Squire Fowler, and the scientification of sex
- Working in cases: British psychiatric social workers and a history of psychoanalysis from the middle, c.1930–60
- Throwing the case open: The impossible subject of Luisa Passerini’s Autobiography of a Generation
- Consciousness reduced: The role of the ‘idiot’ in early evolutionary psychology
- On Kuhn’s case, and Piaget’s: A critical two-sited hauntology (or, On impact without reference)
- Confusing cases: Forrester, Stoller, Agnes, woman
- The case as a travelling genre
- Thinking in multitudes: Questionnaires and composite cases in early American psychology
- ‘If p? Then What?’ Thinking within, with, and from cases
- The potency of the butterfly: The reception of Richard B. Goldschmidt’s animal experiments in German sexology around 1920
- The influence of classical Stoicism on John Locke’s theory of self-ownership
- Textocracy, or, the cybernetic logic of French theory
- Reviewer Acknowledgement 2019
- ‘Ghastly marionettes’ and the political metaphysics of cognitive liberalism: Anti-behaviourism, language, and the origins of totalitarianism
- How disunity matters to the history of cybernetics in the human sciences in the United States, 1940–80
- Automatic Leviathan: Cybernetics and politics in Carl Schmitt’s postwar writings
- Cybernetics for the command economy: Foregrounding entropy in late Soviet planning
- What is the ‘cybernetic’ in the ‘history of cybernetics’? A French case, 1968 to the present
- Cybernetic times: Norbert Wiener, John Stroud, and the ‘brain clock’ hypothesis
- The political theology of entropy: A Katechon for the cybernetic age
- Design as aesthetic education: On the politics and aesthetics of learning environments
- Cybernetics and the human sciences
- Kinsey and the psychoanalysts: Cross-disciplinary knowledge production in post-war US sex research
- More than a case of mistaken identity: Adult entertainment and the making of early sexology
- The case history in the colonies
- Organism and environment in Auguste Comte
- Cold War Pavlov: Homosexual aversion therapy in the 1960s
- Within a single lifetime: Recent writings on autism
- Proving nothing and illustrating much: The case of Michael Balint
- Periodical amnesia and dédoublement in case-reasoning: Writing psychological cases in late 19th-century France
- Must we mean what we do? – Review Symposium on Leys’s The Ascent of Affect
- Affect theory’s alternative genealogies – Review Symposium on Leys’s The Ascent of Affect
- From the ashes, a fertile opportunity for historicism – Review Symposium on Leys’s The Ascent of Affect
- Affect, genealogy, history – Review Symposium on Ruth Leys’s The Ascent of Affect
- Reply to my commentators – Review Symposium on Leys’s The Ascent of Affect
- ‘Polynesians’ in the Brazilian hinterland? Sociohistorical perspectives on skulls, genomics, identity, and nationhood
- ‘Supposing that truth is a woman, what then?’: The lie detector, the love machine, and the logic of fantasy
- Erratum to Babbage among the insurers: Big 19th-century data and the public interest
- The fashionable scientific fraud: Collingwood’s critique of psychometrics
- On ‘modified human agents’: John Lilly and the paranoid style in American neuroscience
- Voices off: Stanley Milgram’s cyranoids in historical context
- What was fair in actuarial fairness?
- Natural law as early social thought: The recovery of natural law for sociology
- Ethics of security: A genealogical introduction
- Practice theory and conservative thought
- The ‘disabilitization’ of medicine: The emergence of Quality of Life as a space to interrogate the concept of the medical model
- The many lives of state capitalism: From classical Marxism to free-market advocacy
- The history of the brain and mind sciences
- Brains and psyches: Child psychological and psychiatric expertise in a Swedish newspaper, 1980–2008
- ‘That they will be capable of governing themselves’: Knowledge of Amerindian Difference and early modern arts of governance in the Spanish Colonial Antilles
- Hannah Arendt, evil, and political resistance
- Psychopathologies of time: Defining mental illness in early 20th-century psychiatry
- Alfred Schutz and ethnomethodology: Origins and departures
- Knowing savagery: Australia and the anatomy of race
- From Eden to savagery and civilization: British colonialism and humanity in the development of natural history, ca. 1600–1840
- Different ways of seeing ‘savagery’: Two Nordic travellers in 18th-century North America
- Rethinking savagery: Slavery experiences and the role of emotions in Oldendorp’s mission ethnography
- A ‘monster with human visage’: The orangutan, savagery, and the borders of humanity in the global Enlightenment
- Globalizing the savage: From stadial theory to a theory of luxury in late-18th-century Swedish discussions of Africa
- Iberian missionaries in God’s vineyard: Enlarging humankind and encompassing the globe in the Renaissance
- Knowing savagery: Humanity in the circuits of colonial knowledge
- Behind the Rhodes statue: Black competency and the imperial academy
- Pornography addiction: The fabrication of a transient sexual disease
- ‘Mere chips from his workshop’: Gotthard Deutsch’s monumental card index of Jewish history
- The metaphysical standing of the human: A future for the history of the human sciences
- Doing ‘Deep Big History’: Race, landscape and the humanity of H J Fleure (1877–1969)
- Resisting neurosciences and sustaining history
- Reviewer Acknowledgement 2018
- The language of social science in everyday life
- From the writing cure to the talking cure: Revisiting the French ‘discovery of the unconscious’
- What was sociology?
- The tool and the job: Digital humanities methods and the future of the history of the human sciences
- The future of the history of the human sciences
- Mass-Observation, surrealist sociology, and the bathos of paperwork
- Blind windows
- Babbage among the insurers: Big 19th-century data and the public interest
- On being psychotic in the South Seas, circa 1947
- The total archive: Data, subjectivity, universality
- The global lexicostatistical database: A total archive of linguistic prehistory
- The living record: Alan Lomax and the world archive of movement
- Social types and sociological analysis
- ‘Peace and happiness await us’: Psychotherapy in Yugoslavia, 1945–85
- Teaching ‘small and helpless’ women how to live: Dialectical Behaviour Therapy in Sweden, ca 1995–2005
- Hypnotherapies in 20th-century Hungary: The extraordinary career of Ferenc Völgyesi
- Sterility and suggestion: Minor psychotherapy in the Soviet Union, 1956–1985
- Of mountains, lakes and essences: John Teasdale and the transmission of mindfulness
- Psychotherapy in Europe
- Freud under the Acropolis: The challenging journey of psychoanalysis in 20th-century Greece (1915–1995)
- What makes neuroethics possible?
- Death of the passive subject: Intentional action and narrative explanation in archaeological studies
- Philosophy, archaeology and the Enlightenment heritage: Cartesian representationalism in applied contexts
- The return of the political Freud? Some notes on the new historiography of psychoanalysis
- The story of humanity and the challenge of posthumanity
- The geopolitical turn in interwar Romanian sociology and geography: From social reform to population exchange plans
- More than representation: Multiscalar assemblages and the Deleuzian challenge to archaeology
- A meaning holistic (dis)solution of subject–object dualism – its implications for the human sciences
- Alexandre Brierre de Boismont and the limits of the psychopathological gaze
- On ‘moral injury’: Psychic fringes and war violence
- Exploring the fringes of psychopathology: Boundary entities, category work and other borderline phenomena in the history of 20th century psychopathology
- Diagnosing Alzheimer’s disease in Kraepelin’s clinic, 1909–1912
- Anticipating psychosis: The Copenhagen High-Risk Project and the dream of the prevention of schizophrenia
- William James and 18th century anthropology: Holism, scepticism and the doctrine of experience
- William James and 18th-century anthropology: Holism, scepticism and the doctrine of experience
- Mysticism in the courtroom in 19th century Europe
- Mysticism in the courtroom in 19th-century Europe
- Performing doubt and negotiating uncertainty: Diagnosing schizophrenia at its onset in post-war German psychiatry
- Feeling and smelling psychosis: American alienism, psychiatry, prodromes and the limits of ‘category work’
- Soviet psychiatry and the origins of the sluggish schizophrenia concept, 1912–1936
- From evolutionary theory to philosophy of history: Raymond Aron and the crisis of French neo-transformism
- Reason beyond Rand: Did Enlightenment values persist among Cold War intellectuals?
- Society, like the market, needs to be constructed: Foucault’s critical project at the dawn of neoliberalism
- The strange survival and apparent resurgence of sociobiology
- Rationality, a bowl of molasses
- Reasoning one’s way through the Cold War (and beyond): Reply to Jamie Cohen-Cole and David Teira
- Inventing the ‘normal’ child: Psychology, delinquency, and the promise of early intervention
- The perpetual becoming of humanity: Bauman, Bloch and the question of humanism
- The making of burnout
- The unfailing machine
- Numbering the mind
- Deliberative public opinion
- Rorschach tests and Rorschach vigilantes
- Psychology and its publics
- Surveying rape
- Albert Ellis, rational therapy and the media of ‘modern’ emotional management
- For reflexivity as an epistemic criterion of ontological coherence and virtuous social theorizing
- Braidotti, Spinoza and disability studies after the human
- Machiavelli and the liberalism of fear
- Psychoanalytic sociology and the traumas of history
- Science–anthropology–literature
- Philosophy and science in Adam Smith’s ‘History of Astronomy’
- Gregory Bateson and Eric Voegelin
- The generation of the GDR
- Scientific expertise and the politics of emotions in the 1902 trial of Giuseppe Musolino
- Brainwashing the cybernetic spectator: The Ipcress File, 1960s cinematic spectacle and the sciences of mind
- ‘Subordination, authority, psychotherapy’
- ‘Cruel to be kind?’ Professionalization, politics and the image of the abstinent psychoanalyst, c. 1940–80
- German émigré psychologists in Tel Aviv (1934–58)
- ‘The line between intervention and abuse’ – autism and applied behaviour analysis
- Psychotherapy in historical perspective
- The action of the imagination
- The science of therapeutic images