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hysteria and reached
`` U.S. pressure on Britain to foster war hysteria over the status of West Berlin has reached its apogee.
War hysteria reached bizarre levels within Democratic Kampuchea.

hysteria and its
On 8 May 1984, under Chernenko's leadership, the USSR announced its intention not to participate, citing security concerns and " chauvinistic sentiments and an anti-Soviet hysteria being whipped up in the United States ",.
That's not what diseases are " Szasz cited drapetomania as an example behavior which many in society did not approve of, being labeled and widely cited as a ' disease ' and likewise with women who did not bow to men's will as having " hysteria " Psychiatry actively obscures the difference between ( mis ) behavior and disease, in its quest to help or harm parties to conflicts.
The film is a document about terrorism and its sociopolitical aftermath: hysteria over state surveillance, repression of constitutional standards and civil rights, and indiscriminate persecution of alleged RAF sympathizers.
The motive is attributed to the governments ' desire to avoid admitting that they could not explain the UFO phenomenon and its associated hysteria at its height.
The Freudian psychoanalytic school of psychology uses its own, somewhat controversial, ways to treat hysteria.
Many now consider hysteria to be a legacy diagnosis ( i. e., a catch-all junk diagnosis ), particularly due to its long list of possible manifestations: one Victorian physician cataloged 75 pages of possible symptoms of hysteria and called the list incomplete.
The music is used in the therapy of patients with certain forms of depression and hysteria, and its effects on the endocrine system recently became an object of research.
The fresh or dried leaves of maypop are used to make a tea that is used to treat insomnia, hysteria, and epilepsy, and is also valued for its analgesic properties.
South Park took aim at the hysteria in its eighth season premiere, " Good Times with Weapons ", on March 17 of that year when Eric Cartman sneaks across a stage in the nude and later blames the incident on a " wardrobe malfunction ".
She is presented as the first case in which it was possible to " thoroughly investigate " hysteria and cause its symptoms to disappear.
Through its actions in my case it will decide whether hysteria is to continue or whether reason and justice are to prevail.
With the economic hysteria, the US began to focus solely on fixing its economy within its borders and ignored the outside world.
Air Force is watching this organization because of its power to touch off mass hysteria and panic.
Disseminated through Redcross to the multiple reflectors of his worsening state, the Archimago virus manifests its allegorical toxicity in the procession of " too solemn sad " powerseekers and losers who exhibit the stunning coincidence of pride and despair, superbia and accidia, that Søren Kierkegaard would analyze as " the sickness unto death ": the phallic hysteria and suicidal despair variously inscribed in the machismo of faithless and lawless chivalry, in the joyless aspiration and desperation of Luciferan glitter, in the abjection of the maternal cave of Night that haunts the house of Pride, and in the spastic thunder of Orgoglio.
He recommended its use for nervous disorders, bruises, burns, scales, bloodshot eyes, toothache, sciatica, epilepsy, hysteria, agues and so on.
Age of Surveillance by Frank Donner ( ISBN 0-394-74771-2 ) claims the Wackenhut Corporation maintained and updated its files even after the McCarthy hysteria had ebbed, adding the names of antiwar protesters and civil rights demonstrators to its list of " derogatory types.
On 19 May 1958, the production moved to the Lyric Opera House, Hammersmith ( now the Lyric Hammersmith ), for its début in London, where it was a commercial and mostly critical failure, instigating " bewildered hysteria " and closing after only eight performances.

hysteria and height
At the height of the hysteria, nearly half the city's male slaves over the age of 16 were in jail.
At the height of the hysteria, half of the city ’ s male slaves over the age of 16 were implicated in the plot and jailed.

hysteria and under
The comics are published under the Comics Code, a set of ethical guidelines drawn up in the 1950s in reaction to anti-comic book hysteria.

hysteria and leadership
The report determined that the decision to incarcerate was based on " race prejudice, war hysteria, and a failure of political leadership.

hysteria and Joseph
Instead, it suggests that Josef Mengele was recruited by the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin to produce " grotesque, child-size aviators " to be remotely piloted and landed in America to cause hysteria in the likeness of Orson Welles ' 1938 radio drama War of the Worlds, but that the aircraft crashed and the incident was hushed up by the Americans.
Charcot demonstrates hypnosis on a " hysteria | hysterical " Salpêtrière patient, " Blanche " ( Blanche Wittmann ), who is supported by Dr. Joseph Babiński ( rear ).
Joseph Babinski ( rear ) supports a " hysteria | hysterical " female patient during demonstration by ( left ) Jean-Martin Charcot

hysteria and McCarthy
The red-baiting attacks on UE during the McCarthy era did tremendous damage to the union, but were eventually shown, even in the prevailing atmosphere of anti-red hysteria, to have no legal merit.

hysteria and .
The professed mission of this disaffiliated generation is to find a new way of life which they can express in poetry and fiction, but what they produce is unfortunately disordered, nourished solely on the hysteria of negation.
This is not to deny the existence of pogroms and ghettos, but only to assert that these horrors have had an effect on the nerves of people who did not experience them, that among the various side effects is the local hysteria of Jewish writers and intellectuals who cry out from confusion, which they call oppression and pain.
Evidently the war drum beating and hysteria so painstakingly being stirred up in the West have been planned long in advance.
With shout and slow dance, with tears and song, with scream and contortion, the corner group was beset by hysteria and shivering, wailing, shouting, possession of something that seemed like an alien and outside force.
The resulting, indescribable torment affects every Southern mind and is the basis of the Southern hysteria.
An hysteria develops soon afterward, causing the local newspapers to report the incident.
" Life magazine described his reception as " worshipful hysteria " and noted that the royal family, for the first time in history, left the royal box to see the show from the front row of the orchestra.
His publications included a focus on alcoholism, crime, degeneration and hysteria.
Isaac Baker Brown ( 1812 – 1873 ), an English gynaecologist who was president of the Medical Society of London in 1865, believed that the " unnatural irritation " of the clitoris caused epilepsy, hysteria, and mania, and would remove it " whenever he had the opportunity of doing so ," according to an obituary.
In Christendom there also began to develop a widespread fear of witchcraft, which was believed to be Satanic in nature, and the subsequent hysteria, known as the Witch Hunt caused the death of around 40, 000 people, most of whom were women.
The transformation of an inflationary development into the hyperinflation has to be identified as a very complex phenomenon, which could be a further advanced research avenue of the complexity economics in conjunction with research areas like mass hysteria, bandwagon effect, social brain and mirror neurons.
At the peak of the hysteria, some hospitals offered free X-rays of children's Halloween hauls in order to find evidence of tampering.
Some people have drawn analogies between certain aspects of hypnotism and areas such as crowd psychology, religious hysteria, and ritual trances in preliterate tribal cultures.
The plot of the now famous movie, Hoosiers, was based on the story of the 1954 Milan team and seems to typify the hysteria related to basketball in the state of Indiana.
Hypnotism was originally used to treat the condition known in the Victorian era as hysteria.
Ashcroft referred to American Library Association opposition to Section 215 as " hysteria " in two separate speeches given in September 2003.
Social contagions such as fads, hysteria, copycat crime, and copycat suicide exemplify memes seen as the contagious imitation of ideas.
In the year after Christina's birth, Maria Eleonora was described as being in a state of hysteria owing to her husband's absences.
Shortly thereafter, Miyazaki proposed scenes in the screenplay for Flying Phantom Ship, in which military tanks would roll into downtown Tokyo and cause mass hysteria, and was hired to storyboard and animate those scenes.
Owen ( 1978 ) cited a number of poltergeist cases in which the subject displayed signs of hysteria.
Others suggest outbreaks of such sightings are a form of mass hysteria.
False charges of heresy and sodomy set aside, the guilt or innocence of the Templars is one of the more difficult historical problems, partly because of the atmosphere of hysteria that had built up in the preceding generation ( marked by habitually intemperate language and extravagant denunciations exchanged between temporal rulers and churchmen ), partly because the subject has been embraced by conspiracy theorists and pseudo-historians.

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