Tag
Ind#1
Ind#2
Name
020
/a9780674546257
039
/a20241128111100 /b950730105146/c20241129105625/z950730105146/y20241129105636/d950730105146/y20241129105641/d950730105146/y20241129105709/d950730105146/y20241129105729/d950730105146
090
/a617.14 /bLUR 1972
100
/aA.R. LURIA
245
/aTHE MAN WITH A SHATTERED WORLD /bTHE HISTORY OF A BRAIN WOUND
264
/aHARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS /bCAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS /c1972
300
/aXXII, 165 PAGES /bILLUSTRATIONS ; 21 CM
500
/aRUSSIAN ORIGINAL PUBLISHED WITH TITTLE : POTERIANNYI IVOZRASHCHENNYI MIR. MOSCOW : IZD-VO MOSK UN-TA, 1971
520
/aRussian psychologist A. R. Luria presents a compelling portrait of a man’s heroic struggle to regain his mental faculties. A soldier named Zasetsky, wounded in the head at the battle of Smolensk in 1943, suddenly found himself in a frightening world: he could recall his childhood but not his recent past; half his field of vision had been destroyed; he had great difficulty speaking, reading, and writing.
Much of the book consists of excerpts from Zasetsky’s own diaries. Laboriously, he records his memories in order to reestablish his past and to affirm his existence as an intelligent being. Luria’s comments and interpolations provide a valuable distillation of the theory and techniques that guided all of his research. His “digressions” are excellent brief introductions to the topic of brain structure and its relation to higher mental functions.
650
/aBRAIN /xWOUNDS AND INJURIES /xPATIENTS /xSOVIET UNION /vBIOGRAPHY
650
/aBRAIN /xWOUNDS AND INJURIES /xCOMPLICATIONS AND SEQUELAE
650
/aPERCEPTION, DISORDERS OF /xPATIENTS /xSOVIET UNION /vBIOGRAPHY
650
/aWORLD WAR, 1939-1945 /xPERSONAL NARRATIVES /zRUSSION
700
/aOLIVER SACKS (FOREWORD)
998
PNM
SINOPSIS - HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
SUMBANGAN - KAMINI VEERAMOHAN (ORANG AWAM)
999
/a003725/bKoleksi Terbuka/cBuku