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48 letters and articles 1923-1955 - most of them promoting the Alexander Technique. Not all are yet available to read here.
Brief summary is given in square parenthesis. Technique or T. = the Alexander Technique.
Introduction
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Bagguley, Alice |
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Barlow, Dr Wilfred
(pending permisssion)
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| Just Suggestion? |
1944 letter in the British Medical Journal. |
| Psychology of the "Presser" |
1944 letter in the British Medical Journal. |
| Stress Fractures |
1945 letter in The Lancet. |
| Posture |
1950 letter in The Lancet. |
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Beck, Dorothy
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| What Does 'Mental Age' Mean? |
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Third of four letters in The Times Educational Supplement about 1928-31. 581 words. [Dorothy Beck, a headmistress, gives an example of an "under-developed" boy sent to Alexander for re-education.] |
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Busch, Arthur J. |
| I Was Thinking |
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1930? article in The Brooklyn Citizen. 1,146 words. [Comparing Gerald Stanley Lee's discoveries with Alexander's.] |
| The Nature of Disease |
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1931 article in The Brooklyn Citizen. 944 words. [Dr. McDonagh's support for Alexander in The Nature of Disease.] |
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Douglas, Dr Mungo
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| Prevention of Scoliosis |
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1929 letter in the British Medical Journal.
192 words. |
| Nutrition and Living Habits |
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1932: first of two letters in the Medical World. 346 words. [Alexander's work as an alternative to the germ notion.] |
| Nutrition and Living Habits |
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1932: second of two letters in the Medical World. 433 words. [Responding to Major Austin, placing habit over nutrition.] |
| The 'Aged' Child |
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1935 letter in the British Journal of Physical Medicine. 631 words. [Posture to be improved by Alexander's work, confirmed by Magnus.] |
| Physical Culture |
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1936 letter in the British Medical Journal. 457 words. [Response to report of the Physical Education Committee.] |
| Control of Functioning |
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1939; second of three letters in the British Medical Journal. 391 words. [Response to Macdonald's letter, scientific confirmation of Alexander's work in Coghill's work.] |
| Integrated Conscious Man |
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1940 article in the Literary Guide. 1,084 words. [Introduction to the Technique; the Technique as co-ordination.] |
| The Atlanto-Occipital Joints |
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1942 article published as leaflet. 1,054 words. [The importance of equipoise of the atlanto-occipital joints and their influence.] |
| Breathing and Coronary Circulation |
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1945 letter in the British Medical Journal. 318 words. [Making a correction to a letter by Dr. Halstead Dixon.] |
| A Unique Example of Operational Verification during Scientific Experimentation |
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1946 article in The Medical Press and Circular. 1,968 words.
[Arguing that Alexander's work on himself in evolving the Technique is scientific and verifiable.] |
| Mr. Hamilton Fyfe and the Belief in Man |
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1948 letter in The Literary Guide. 560 words. [Responding to Mr. Fyfe's pessimism by explaining the potential of the T.] |
| The Alexander Libel Action |
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1950 letter in The Lancet. 527 words. [Referring to Barlow's article on the Action; suggesting that Magnus' term Zentralapparat has been prejudicially translated.] |
| Posture |
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1950 letter in The Lancet. 324 words. [Referring to a letter by Barlow; pointing out a connection between Dart's work and Douglas' article "Reorientation."] |
| Use of the Self |
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1951 letter in the British Medical Journal. 433 words. [Suggesting the T. as an alternative to Dr. Halstead Dixon's method of deep breathing for coronary thrombosis.] |
| Primary Control |
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1951 letter in the British Medical Journal. 292 words. [Addition to above letter, describing the primary control.] |
| Joint-Strain in Sleep |
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1952 letter in The Lancet. 435 words. [Why joint-strain can be avoided by a correct employment of the primary control.] |
| A Philosophy of Medicine |
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1953 letter in The Lancet. 247 words. [Responding to Sir Russell Brain's oration and comment that a philosophy should be based upon the living organism as a whole.] |
| Control of Reaction |
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1954 letter in The Lancet. 1,117 words. [Description of Magnus' Zentralapparat; seeing it as the anatomical background for some of Alexander's work.] |
| "De-tensing" |
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1954 letter in the Manchester Guardian. 506 words. [Introduction to the Technique as a means of controlling muscular tension.] |
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Drew, Dr. Radcliffe
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Lawrence, Esther
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| What Does 'Mental Age' Mean? |
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1928: first of four letters in The Times Educational Supplement. 646 words. [The principal of the Froebel Institute draws attention to the importance of Alexander's work for education.] |
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Lytton, The Earl of
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| What Does 'Mental Age' Mean? |
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1928: second of four letters in The Times Educational Supplement. 1,154 words. [Lord Lytton argues that Alexander's principles should be "in force in every school in the country."] |
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Macdonagh, Dr J. E. R.
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| What Does 'Mental Age' Mean? |
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Fourth of four letters in The Times Educational Supplement about 1928-31. 838 words. ["Over-excitation" as the cause of wrong balance in the brain-stem and subsequent organic trouble.] |
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Macdonald, Patrick J. |
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Macdonald, Dr Peter
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| Discussion on the Nervous Child |
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1923 extract from a report from a discussion of the Section of Neurology and Psychological Medicine of the B. M. A., published in the British Medical Journal. 704 words. [Introducing the "unorthodox" technique of Alexander.] |
| New Thought on Health and the Prevention of Disease |
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1924 extract from an opening paper in a "Discussion on the Role of the General Practitioner in Preventive Medicine" from a meeting of the B.M.A. 557 words. [Introducing the T.] |
| Function and Posture |
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First of four letters in the British Medical Journal,1928.
624 words. [The importance of "erect posture".] |
| The Curability of Asthma |
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1929 letter in the British Medical Journal. 350 words. [M. concludes asthma is associated with bad functioning.] |
| Control of Functioning |
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1939: first of three letters in the British Medical Journal. 615 words. [Coghill's work as confirmation of Alexander's.] |
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McGowan, Dr R. G.
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| Function and Posture |
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1928: second of four letters in the British Medical Journal,1928. 270 words. [The importance of Alexander's work for preventive medicine.] |
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March, Michael
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| An Open Letter to Dr. Alexis Carrel |
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1935? article in The Brooklyn Citizen. 1,832 words. [A critic of Carrel's Man, the Unknown in the light of Alexander's work.] |
| The Plight of the Educators |
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1937 article in The Brooklyn Citizen. 1,082 words. [A critic of Kilpatrick's pamphlet "A Reconstructed Theory of the Educative Process" in the light of Alexander's technique.] |
| Important Dilemma Facing Mankind |
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1938 article in The Brooklyn Citizen. 957 words. [Referring to Raymond Fosdick's Review of the Rockefeller Foundation and the subject of the whole man.] |
| The Basic Error of Psychology |
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1939 article in The Brooklyn Citizen. 975 words.[The study of wholeness in Coghill's and Alexander's work.] |
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Murdoch, Dr. Andrew
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| Function and Posture |
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1928: second of four letters in the British Medical Journal. 711 words. [Alexander goes further than Dr. Mackenzie in his lecture on the importance of posture.] |
| The Use of the Self |
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1932 letter in the British Medical Journal. 542 words. [An addition and comments to the review of The Use of the Self.] |
| Control of Functioning |
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1939: third of three letters in the British Medical Journal. 448 words. [Coghill's work is a confirmation of primary control.] |
| Sir James Mackenzie's Heart |
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1939 letter in the British Medical Journal. 263 words. [Sir James was scornful of Alexaner's ideas; Murdoch's angina disappeared with the Technique.] |
| Physical Training - 1 |
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1940 letter in the British Medical Journal. xx words. [A criticism of Army training methods. No mention of the T.] |
| Physical Training - 2 |
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1940 letter in the British Medical Journal. 714 words. [The importance of head balance for Army training.] |
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Rugg-Gunn, Dr A.
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| A New Profession |
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Article in Women's Employment c. 1932. 848 words. [Advertising Alexander's training course for teachers.] |
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Yearsley, Dr Macleod |
| Man's Future |
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1925 article in the Literary Guide. 1,571 words. [Introduction to the T. a key to "the reconciliation of reasoned conviction and its behaviour counterpart."] |
| Is Civilisation a Failure? |
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1926 letter in The Lancet. 234 words. [A comment on Sir Arbuthnot Lane's discourse of same title.] |
| Racial Degeneration |
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1926 letter in The Lancet. 150 words. [A comment on Dean Inge's lecture of same title.] |
| The Science of Everything |
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1928? letter in The Times Literary Supplement. 874 words. [Alexander's work meets the demand for radical new concepts in psychology.] |
| Recent Advances in the Treatment of Chronic Deafness |
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1927 extract from lecture. 188 words. [The self-control technique of Alexander as an important part of preventive medicine.] |
| Function and Posture |
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1928: third of four letters in the British Medical Journal.
183 words. [Endorsing Macdonald's support for Alexander.] |
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