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Mental Illness Publications in Major Pastoral Care Journals from 1950 to 2003
Authors:Donald Capps  Nathan Steven Carlin
Institution:(1) Princeton Theological Seminary, P.O. Box 821, Princeton, NJ 08542-0803, USA;(2) Department of Religious Studies, Rice University, MS-15, P. O. Box 1892, Houston, TX 77005-1892, USA
Abstract:The issue of mental illness has been of considerable interest to both of us over the past several years. The first author has taught a course on the subject for a decade, and his recent publications on the subject include several articles on John Nash (Capps, 2003b, 2004a,b, 2005b), a book on mental illness for pastoral care professionals (2005a), and an article on whether William James was a patient at McLean Hospital (2007). The second author has had experience with the mentally ill through his pastoral work at Trenton Psychiatrist Hospital in Trenton, New Jersey, a mental hospital with a rather checkered history (see Scull, 2005), and in Scotland and has also written an article on John Nash (Carlin, 2006). This shared interest, together with evidence that serious mental illness in America has been steadily increasing (Torrey &; Miller, 2001, pp. 295–299), caused us to wonder what sort of attention mental illness has received in our major journals of pastoral care from 1950 to the present. Specifically, has this attention kept pace with the increase in mental illness?
Keywords:Mental illness  Pastoral care journals  Pastoral care professionals  Publication trends  Mental illness trends
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