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The Mask Of Sanity Pdf

01.02.2020

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  1. The Mask Of Sanity Hervey Cleckley Pdf
  2. Hervey Cleckley Mask Of Sanity
  3. Cleckley Psychopathy
  4. The Mask Of Sanity 2017
  5. Political Ponerology
  6. The Mask Of Sanity Pdf Free

The Mask of Sanity An Attempt to Clarify Some Issues About the So Called Psychopathic Personality 5th edition by Hervey M. 19 Want to read; Published November 1988 by Emily S. The Mask of Sanity: An Attempt to Clarify Some Issues About the So-Called Psychopathic Personality is a book written by American psychiatrist Hervey M. Cleckley, first published in 1941, describing Cleckley's clinical interviews with patients in a locked institution. Mask of Sanity by Hervey Cleckley PDF - book download FREE! 'Stanley,' a chapter from Hervey M. Cleckley's classic study of psychopaths, The Mask of Sanity: Discover the Secret History of the World - and how to get out alive! The Psychopath: The Mask of Sanity Special Research by Quantum Future School.

The Mask Of Sanity THE PRESENT VOLUME grew out of an old conviction which increased during several years while I sat at staff meetings in a large neuropsychiatric hospital. Many hundreds of such cases as those presented here were studied and discussed. Mask of Sanity by Hervey Cleckley PDF - book download FREE! 'Stanley,' a chapter from Hervey M. Cleckley's classic study of psychopaths, The Mask of Sanity: Discover the Secret History of the World - and how to get out alive! The Psychopath: The Mask of Sanity Special Research. The Mask of Sanity is a book written by Hervey Cleckley, M.D., first published in 1941, describing Cleckley's clinical interviews with incarcerated psychopaths. It is considered a seminal work and the most influential clinical description of psychopathy in the 20th century. The Mask of Sanity: An Attempt to Clarify Some Issues About the So-Called Psychopathic Personality is a book written by American psychiatrist Hervey M. Cleckley, first published in 1941, describing Cleckley's clinical interviews with patients in a locked institution.

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The Mask of Sanity
AuthorJacob M. Appel
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherThe Permanent Press
March 2017
ISBN978-1-57962-495-8

The Mask of Sanity is an American novel by Jacob M. Appel. It was published by The Permanent Press in 2017.[1] The novel was a finalist for the Faulkner-Wisdom Prize[2] and the runner up for Killer Nashville's Claymore Award.[3]

Plot[edit]

Dr. Jeremy Balint is an up-and-coming cardiologist who discovers that his wife, Amanda, is having an affair with his fellow physician, Warren Sugarman.[4] He is also a high-functioning sociopath. Balint sets out to murder Sugarman and to disguise the murder as a serial killing.[5]

Reception[edit]

Bruce DeSilva in The Washington Post described the novel as 'both a suspenseful yarn and a chilling portrait of the mind of a high-functioning sociopath.'[6]Publisher's Weekly praised the novel's 'matter-of-fact, nonjudgmental prose' and described the volume as 'deeply unsettling.'[7]Kirkus called it 'Intelligent and chilling.'[8] Reviewing the novel in Amsterdam Quarterly, Bryan Monte wrote, 'The Mask of Sanity is full of surprises and will keep the reader wondering if Balint will be caught all the way to the very end of the story.'[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^Fort Wayne News Sentinel, May 4, 2017
  2. ^New Orleans Times-Picayune, Oct 15, 2016
  3. ^The Tennessean, Jun 11, 2016
  4. ^Publisher's Weekly, March 2017
  5. ^Publisher's Weekly, March 2017
  6. ^Washington Post Review
  7. ^Publisher's Weekly, March 2017
  8. ^Kirkus Review
  9. ^Review in Amsterdam Quarterly
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The Mask of Sanity: An Attempt to Clarify Some Issues About the So-Called Psychopathic Personality is a book written by American psychiatrist Hervey M. Cleckley, first published in 1941, describing Cleckley's clinical interviews with patients in a locked institution. The text is considered to be a seminal work and the most influential clinical description of psychopathy in..more
Published January 31st 2003 by Textbook Pub (first published January 1st 1941)
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Our Only Enemy : Understanding The Psychopath.
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Psychopaths/Sociopaths Non-Fiction (NON True Crime)
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Rating details

Jan 15, 2013Kristina rated it liked it
I wanted to read Hervey Cleckley’s The Mask of Sanity because it is referenced in other psychopathology books as the leader of psychopathology for its time. Robert D. Hare’s Without Conscience, a book on psychopaths I’ve read a few times, references it and I thought I would check it out. To be clear, I read the fourth (1964) edition. I found this book fascinating for probably all the wrong reasons.
To put this book in its proper perspective, the bulk of the book (research and writing) was done in
..more
Jul 04, 2019

The Mask Of Sanity Hervey Cleckley Pdf

Peter Mcloughlin rated it really liked it
Shelves: 1890-1959, education, general-history, nonfiction, american-history, biology, second-world-war, general-science, intellectual-history, law
A classic study of psychopaths with numerous case studies, defining characteristics of psychopaths, glib superficial charm, manipulative, little or no emotional bonds, criminal behavior, failure to learn from experience, pathological lying, violent behavior, injudicious hedonism, lack of fear or remorse. The signs that many are familiar. The doctor distinguishes this from the type of madness of schizophrenia which is driven by hallucination and delusion and paranoia. On the surface, a psychopat..more
Sep 20, 2016Leo Robertson rated it liked it · review of another edition
Phew!!!! THANK FUCK FOR THAT, EVERYBODY!!
I've been reading this for research for a story. Perhaps fortuitously I picked the toughest book I needed to read for this research. That means I'll be able to plough through the rest by the end of the month in time to get back to editing the story throughout October in time to start a new story for NaNoWriMo November! We're on schedule, everybody!
Pfffft not like you'll get to see anything I'm writing until someone publishes it, but, sorry folks, that par
..more
Dec 12, 2012Mary Overton added it · review of another edition
Cleckley's book is out of print, so I read a pdf version of a scanned copy made available at http://cassiopaea.org/2011/02/10/the-..
.. this online essay is informative if you can handle/ignore the New Age Twilight Zone stuff at the end.
Cleckley provides detailed case histories of psychopaths .. incredible reading if you are interested in stories of dysfunctional people/families.
Medical discussions in Cleckley's book are fascinating from an historical viewpoint .. obviously info is dated.
Con
..more
Cleckley scatters through this book constant fascinating anecdotes and remarks, some so outrageous or remarkable that one would assume he made them up if he were writing on some other topic.
Cleckley's moralizing and occasional very old-fashioned comments are occasionally as interesting, and reading him in 2012, one feels very strongly just how distant (in a social mores sense) we are from him in the 1940s and earlier - when he writes of 'miscegenation' (I wonder how many teenagers now could tell
..more
May 28, 2018Ana rated it it was amazing
Shelves: me-likey-a-lot, a-little-historical, about-murders, non-fiction, of-self, somehow-societal, brainy-psychological, law-abiding-citizen, psych-neuro, ebook
An immensely useful read for those interested in psychopathy, particularly if you are/were a Psychology/Psychiatry/Criminology student. Keep in mind that it was originally published in 1941, and you will have to sit through an entire chapter which calls homosexuality a mental disorder. Barring that, this book is one of the cardinal works on psychopathy, from a pioneer in the field, and it contains tens of detailed cases and clinical considerations from a practitioner who believed that psychopath..more
Aug 04, 2014Maja Leibovitz rated it it was amazing
Cleckley can write about all the myriad ways circumscribed to scrubbing toilet bowls while somaticizing such tribulations through delineating the less than perfunctory actions required to achieve such immaculate results and still find himself amenable even to the most dyspeptic individual as well as still be considered the pioneer in such a boring field. entertaining you quite propitiously along the way! His writing style is superb!
Jun 30, 2016Charlotte Earl rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Hervey Cleckley is regarded as the father of the field of psychopathy studies. His first book was published in 1941, and this version of the book is his 1975 revised edition. He died in 1984, and the last edition of this book came out in 1888. It is a fascinating read, but it does require dedication to one's purpose to see it through to the end. Mr. Cleckley's writing style is to be commended, but he is nonetheless writing from a medical stand point, and the average lay person must focus careful..more
Jan 18, 2008Dottie rated it really liked it
Shelves: own, philosophy-religion-science, 1967-1997
I just remembered this book from way back. I think I must have read this one sometime in the late 1970's or early 1980's. It is very hard sledding being a textbook written I believe in the 1940's. I took nearly a year to read it -- I was doing other reading also, but largely it was my intent to read this slowly and to absorb it thoroughly. I was spurred into this by hearing Dr. Laura -- oh yes, not intentionally tuned in but in passing I heard some discussion of a caller which led me to lissten..more
a perfect snapshot of how mental health was perceived, observed, treated and studied in the 40s.
Suffice to say: mental health terminologies and approaches/treatments are way better now but mental health issues were taken more seriously back then
Jun 04, 2008Mike rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
An amazingly outdated yet completely fascinating description of the modern psychopath. With tons of actual case studies, you will not believe what you read here. Truth is stranger than fiction. It's hard to find, and you have to slog through parts, but it is worth it.

Hervey Cleckley Mask Of Sanity

Sep 24, 2015Greg Hickey rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Considered a revolutionary study of psychopathy upon its initial publication in 1941, Hervey Cleckley's The Mask of Sanity: An Attempt to Clarify Some Issues about the So-Called Psychopathic Personality offers useful insight into the affliction almost eighty years later. Faced with a poor understanding of psychopathy throughout society as well as the legal and psychiatric community, Dr. Cleckley hoped to identify the common symptoms of psychopaths and improve their treatment options. Working in..more
Nov 13, 2014James Hatton rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Here's one of the first formal studies of psychopathy, under that name. There are several 'flavors' of psychopaths. This one's about psychopaths who are lifetime screw-ups. They just can't get their life together. To the people around them, they're like a bad odor. To themselves, they're just strolling through life, oblivious to the havoc they wreak.
I don't think this book is in print, but you might find the PDF online.
By the way, I consider sociopaths and psychopath the same thing. It's unclear
..more
Oct 01, 2012Liz rated it liked it
Shelves: you-can-t-handle-the-truth, it-s-intellectual-innit, have-dl
I learnt all I can about sociopaths from this book. The case studies were by far the most interesting part of the book. Can be a little dry and it's definitely out dated. Most of the behaviours in this book that point to someone being a sociopath are socially acceptable ways for people to behave today...so either the book is REALLY out of date or we are living in the era of the sociopath.
Amazing Book and a must read for someone who wishes to understand the depth in being human/inhuman. Human is an animal and the line between normal and abnormal is thin, biased and often misleading.
Jan 22, 2017Caidyn (SEMI-HIATUS; BW Reviews; he/him/his) marked it as to-read
Another thing I should read because of my psychopathy class.
Aug 12, 2012David rated it really liked it
A clinical textbook on psychopathy. I read this in college after a friend recommended it.
Feb 27, 2008Avis Black rated it really liked it
The classic study about narcissistic personality disorder.
Interesting to know there's thin line between saint and psychopath.
Jul 07, 2013Kristine rated it liked it · review of another edition
I couldn't take it anymore so I'm calling it quits on this one, although it sits proudly on my bookshelf at work!
Aug 25, 2019Henri Moreaux rated it liked it · review of another edition
First published in 1941 and revised numerous times, I read the 5th edition published in 1975.
Whilst updated as time passed, the 5th edition still included the now known to be incorrect hypothesis that homosexuality is a mental disorder. Asides for this the book, although written academically, and as such quite dry, is up to par with the theories of today.
I encoutered mention of this work in Robert D Hare's Without Conscience which noted it was one of the pivotal and first works on psychopatholog
..more
Aug 21, 2013Maria rated it liked it · review of another edition
This book is interesting, for the most part, from a historical perspective: we know more about psycopathy nowadays, so the book is of limited interest to those who want to learn about the topic. Still, Cleckey makes some interesting points, for instance regarding the ego-syntonic nature of the pathology (the psycopath is happy the way s/he is) and the way this pathology does not fit in with our notions of 'insanity,' as psycopaths suffer from no delusions and can be quite rational in some aspect..more
The most entertaining books open with a bang.
'A millionaire notable for his eccentricity had an older and better balanced brother
who, on numerous fitting occasions, exercised strong persuasion to bring him under
psychiatric care. On receiving word that this wiser brother had been deserted
immediately after the nuptial night by a famous lady of the theatre (on whom he had
just settled a large fortune) and that the bride, furthermore, had, during the brief
pseudoconnubial episode, remained stubbo
..more
Gives a good idea of the field of psychiatry as pertaining to the diagnosis of 'psychopath' in the 1940s era and has really fascinating case studies & attempts to analyze famous & fictional people. This being the 1940s, the author does come with his own set of era-appropriate prejudices, though he seems to be on the progressive end for a white man for that era (i.e. he noted that homosexuals, for their deviations, seem to do very well, and possibly better than some heterosexuals, given t..more
Jul 04, 2011Vasil Kolev rated it really liked it
The book has a very heavy language (not the kind of too much terminology, but of too much words and over-complex sentences).
It's a good description of the 'psychopathic personality disorder', called this by the author, otherwise (as he explains) it falls somewhere under 'antisocial personality disorder'. It's split in four parts - intro, an overview of the patients he studied (about 20 cases), a comparison with other disorders and diseases and a description of the elements of the disorder, and a
..more
Apr 18, 2017Anson Berberich rated it liked it · review of another edition
I first heard about this book in a Kurt Vonnegut autobiography. I bought it because he recommended it for some reason I don't remember, it was some time ago. I read the whole thing just for fun, but it turned out to be more educational than fun. There were moments in the book that were a bit entertaining, or even close to what I would call 'Short stories,' or, the personal stories of patients/study subjects of Dr. Cleckley. My wife just read the book for that one section. This was supposed to be..more
I expected a rather different book when I decided to read this. I thought it would afford me some better understanding of the psychopathic personality. Instead, the author presented many case histories of people in all walks of life who didn't act in ways one would expect from a psychopath, but rather in flamboyant, self-destructive, illegal and bizarre behavior in ways I would think are more often associated with alcohol abuse and/or severe lack of impulse control. More, in fact, in keeping wit..more

Cleckley Psychopathy

I disagree with plenty of the conclusions the author arrives at, and more than a few of the insights, explanations, an descriptions presented. That being said this work has informed a great deal of my own thinking on the complex subject of antisocial/psychopathic/sociopathic behavior, and despite its dry, academic nature I really enjoyed it.
Coincidentally, a saw a quote (I'm not sure of its source) just this morning that struck me forcefully:
'My mask of sanity is about to slip.'
That is an absolu
..more
A very interesting read - I learned about how others succeed;
I learned what qualities I can embrace, and what qualities I can cast off; and still being a success.
Since many of us are not psychopaths, but successful never-the-less - we can understand how to navigate the corporate world; and avoid being harmed by careless, malicious, stupid actions of other.
As I read in a very interesting book, back in 2003, habits are like furniture - we can choose decorate out Mind Palace as best suits us - whil
..more
Sep 14, 2008Patricia rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Recommends it for: anyone interested in what a world without loving caretakers is creating
Recommended to Patricia by: my family while I was 16
scary. great in-depth research about psychopathology. still salient today. perhaps more than ever because it doesn't mince words and examine rehabilitation. A great companion to 'In Cold Blood' by Truman Capote. These were the years when the average American was just starting to find out about the evil lurking out there in damaged people who have no conscience.
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Dr. Hervey Milton Cleckley (1903 - January 28, 1984) was an American psychiatrist and pioneer in the field of psychopathy. His book, The Mask of Sanity, originally published in 1941, provided the most influential clinical description of psychopathy in the 20th Century. The term 'mask of sanity' derived from Cleckley's observations that, unlike people with major mental disorders, a 'psychopath' can..more

The Mask Of Sanity 2017

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Political Ponerology

“The 16 characteristics of psychopaths:
1. Intelligent
2. Rational
3. Calm
4. Unreliable
5. Insincere
6. Without shame or remorse
7. Having poor judgment
8. Without capacity for love
9. Unemotional
10. Poor insight
11. Indifferent to the trust or kindness of others
12. Overreactive to alcohol
13. Suicidal
14. Impersonal sex life
15. Lacking long-term goals
16. Inadequately motivated antisocial behavior”
— 5 likes
“They also bring to mind what sometimes seems to be a rapt predilection of small but influential cults of intellectuals or esthetes for what is generally regarded as perverse dispirited or distastefully unintelligible. The award of a Nobel Prize in literature to Andre Gide who in his work fervently and openly insists that pederasty is the superior and preferable way of life for adolescent boys furnishes a memorable example of such judgments. Renowned critics and some professors in our best universities reverently acclaim as the superlative expression of genius James Joyce's Finnegan's Wake a 628page collection of erudite gibberish indistinguishable to most people from the familiar word salad produced by hebephrenic patients on the back wards of any state hospital.” — 4 likes

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