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From demons to depression: A history of pre-modern mental health
ATS2579
Synopsis
In this unit you will learn how unusual psychological and somatopsychic experiences were understood in premodern Europe. You will trace the long history of concepts such as ‘possession’, ‘ecstasy’, ‘melancholy’, ‘hypochondria’, ‘hysteria’, ‘anorexia’, ‘lovesickness’ and ‘tarantism’ from late antiquity to the eighteenth century. Is it possible to diagnose people in the past with modern psychiatric conditions such as depression, bipolar disorder or schizophrenia? And if not, what can the historiography of religion, medicine and the emotions teach us about the creation, legitimation or stigmatisation of ‘altered states’ of mind and body? Sign up to do battle with demons, fly with witches, cry with mystics, vibe with vampires, and dance the tarantella!
Sourced from the Monash Handbook 2026.
Quick facts
- Credit points
- 6
- Level
- 2
- Audience
- Undergraduate
- Type
- Coursework
- School
- Faculty of Arts
- Faculty
- History
- Handbook year
- 2026
Prerequisites
No prereqs in the handbook graph.
What it unlocks
Nothing in the visible graph depends on this unit.
Listed in 4 areas of study
- HistoryLevel 2 and 3 elective units
- HistoryLevel 2 and 3 elective units
- Health humanitiesLevel 2 and 3 elective units
- Health humanitiesLevel 2 and 3 elective units