M. Coate, Beyond All Reason (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1965), p. 21.
J. Parnas and P. Handset, “Phenomenology of Anomalous Self- Expression in Early Schizophrenia,” Comprehensive Psychiatry 44 (2003): 121–34.
B. J. Freedman, “The Subjective Experience of Perceptual and Cognitive Disturbances in Schizophrenia,” Archives of General Psychiatry 30 (1974): 333–40.
E. F. Torrey, “Headaches After Lumbar Puncture and Insensitivity to Pain in Psychiatric Patients,” New England Journal of Medicine 301 (1979): 110.
G. D. Watson, P.C. Chandarana, and H. Merskey, “Relationship between Pain and Schizophrenia,” British Journal of Psychiatry 138 (1981): 33–36.
L. K. Bickerstaff, S.C. Harris, R.S. Leggett, et al., “Pain Insensitivity in Schizophrenic Patients,” Archives of Surgery 123 (1988): 49–51.
N. McDonald, “Living with Schizophrenia,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 82 (1960): 218–21, 678–81.
J. Chapman, “The Early Symptoms of Schizophrenia,” British Journal of Psychiatry 112 (1966): 225–51.
S. Sheehan, Is There No Place on Earth for Me? (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1982), p. 69.
B. O’Brien, Operators and Things: The Inner Life of a Schizophrenic (New York: Signet, 1976), pp. 97–98. “During the visit”: Sechehaye, p. 28.
G. Bateson, ed., Perceval’s Narrative: A Patient’s Account of His Psychosis 1830–1832 (1838, 1840) (New York: Morrow, 1974), p. 269.
Anonymous, “I Feel Like I Am Trapped Inside My Head, Banging Desperately against Its Walls,” New York Times, March 18, 1986, p. C–3.
S. Nasar, A Beautiful Mind (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998), p. 11.
A. Chekhov, “Ward No. 6,” quoted in A.A. Stone and S.S. Stone, eds., The Abnormal Personality through Literature (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice- Hall, 1966), p.5.
de Clerembault: G. Remington and H. Book, “Case Report of de Clerembault Syndrome, Bipolar Affective Disorder and Response to Lithium,” American Journal of Psychiatry 141 (1984): 1285–88.
C. Hubert, “Woman Defies Her Demons to Excel,” Sacramento Bee, February 1, 2002, p. A-1.
E. F. Torrey, et al., Threats to Radio and Television Station Personnel in the United States by Individuals with Severe Mental Illnesses (Washington, D.C.: Public Citizen’s Health Research Group and the Treatment Advocacy Center, 1999).
P. Earle, “Popular Fallacies in Regard to Insanity and the Insane,” Journal of Social Science 26: 107–17, 1890.
J. Lang, “The Other Side of Hallucinations,” American Journal of Psychiatry 94 (1938): 1090–97.
D. P. Schreber, Memoirs of My Nervous Illness (1903), translated and with introduction by I. Macalpine and R.A. Hunter (London: William Dawson, 1955), p. 172.
E. Goode, “Experts See Mind’s Voices in New Light,” New York Times, May 6, 2003, p. F-1.
D. Terry and D. Terry, “My Private Chorus of Chaos,” Chicago Tribune, February 23, 2003, p.8.
P. K. McGuire, G.M. S. Shah, and R.M. Murray, “Increased Blood Flow in Broca’s Area during Auditory Hallucinations in Schizophrenia,” Lancet 342 (1993): 703–6.
M. Plaze, M.– L. Paillère-Martinot, J. Penttilä, et al., “‘Where Do Auditory Hallucinations Come From?’—A Brain Morphometry Study of Schizophrenia Patients with Inner or Outer Space Hallucinations,” Schizophrenia Bulletin 37 (2011): 212–21.
E. M.R. Critchley, “Auditory Experiences of Deaf Schizophrenics,” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 76 (1983): 542–44.
Creativity: The Magic Synthesis (New York: Basic Books 1976), p. 251.
H. Faure, “L’Investissement Delirant de L’Image de Soi,” Evolution Psychiatrique 3 (1956): 545–77.
S. Bustamante, K. Maurer, W. Loffler, et al., “Depressive Symptoms in the Early Course of Schizophrenia,” abstract, Schizophrenia Research 11 (1994): 187.
M. Stakes, “First Person Account: Becoming Seaworthy,” Schizophrenia Bulletin 11 (1985): 629.
P. Cramer, J. Bowen, and M. O’Neill, “Schizophrenics and Social Judgment,” British Journal of Psychiatry 160 (1992): 481–87.
C. G. Kohler, T.H. Turner, W.B. Bilker, et al., “Facial Emotion Recognition in Schizophrenia: Intensity Effects and Error Pattern,” American Journal of Psychiatry 160 (2003): 1768–74.
E. Meyer and L. Covi, “The Experience of Depersonalization: A Written Report by a Patient,” Psychiatry 23 (1960): 215–17.
J. A. Wechsler, In a Darkness (New York: Norton, 1972), p. 17.
A. M. Kring, S.L. Kerr, D.A. Smith, et al., “Flat Affect in Schizophrenia Does Not Reflect Diminished Subjective Experience of Emotion,” Journal of Abnormal Psychology 102 (1993): 507–17.
J. K. Bouricius, “Negative Symptoms and Emotions in Schizophrenia,” Schizophrenia Bulletin 15 (1989): 201–7.
I. Chovil, “First Person Account: I and I, Dancing Fool, Challenge You the World to a Duel,” Schizophrenia Bulletin 26 (2000): 745–47.
T. C. Manschreck, et al., “Disturbed Voluntary Motor Activity in Schizophrenic Disorder,” Psychological Medicine 12 (1982): 73–84.