Login with Social Account:

  • White-Yoji Ishikawa Yoji ishikawa photo library (Japanese Edition).
  • Editorial Reviews.
  • The Wild Child;
  • FRENCH A2 Intermediate Film Study;
  • Jean Marc Gaspard Itard!
  • The Hunt for a Notorious Terrorist.
  • Navigasjonsmeny!

Among his pioneering achievements were the invention of the Eustachian catheter Itard's catheter Into the wild In three French sportsmen were exploring a wood in southern France when they came upon a young boy. Paris, Goujon fils, An X English translation, London, Second and less optimistic report: Lucien Malson and Octave Mannoni: Frankfurt am Main, New edition in This is the first modern textbook devoted exclusively to diseases of the ear.

Product description

He described it in the Marquise de Dampierre, a woman of nobility. French pioneers in the field of mental deficiency. American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 3 1 , Medicine in the history of mental retardation. American Journal of Mental Deficiency, , 72 2: Wolf Children and the Problem of Human Nature. Monthly Reviev Press, The relation of historical and contemporary theories to functional Teaching. Functional teaching of the mentally retarded. Charles C Thomas, Oxford University Press, The "failure" of J.

Journal of Special Education, , 7 4: The wild boy of Aveyron.

Jean Marc Gaspard Itard

The wild boy of Aveyron "Itard's syndrome"? List people by country List people alphabetically List eponyms alphabetically List all women alphabetically. What is an eponym? An eponym is a word derived from the name of a person, whether real or fictional. A medical eponym is thus any word related to medicine, whose name is derived from a person. It is our ambition to present a complete survey of all medical phenomena named for a person, with a biography of that person.

bande annonce victor l 'enfant sauvage de l 'aveyron

This survey of medical eponyms and the persons behind them is meant as a general interest site only. No information found here must under any circumstances be used for medical purposes, diagnostically, therapeutically or otherwise.

Victor fra Aveyron – Wikipedia

If you, or anybody close to you, is affected, or believe to be affected, by any condition mentioned here: Enter your email address and we'll send you instructions on how to access your account. We have not verified that the email belongs to you. Please check your inbox for the verification email.


  • Buy for others.
  • Biography of Jean Marc Gaspard Itard!
  • All About Love: Iolani Palace Impressions?

Or sign in with a different account. You will receive an email shortly to confirm your email address.

Related eponyms

Ring in the New Year by celebrating Hollywood's past in a quintet that includes That's Entertainment , its two sequels Part Sign Up Sign In. Sign Out My Profile. Login with Social Account: Or, use your email account: Not a TCM Member? For security reasons your password needs to be changed Enter your current password: Choose a new password: Please Sign In again, to make changes to your account.

Jean Marc Gaspard Itard

Login with your social network: Create Account Learn More. To resend the verification email, please enter your email address and click Submit. In , a feral boy is discovered outside the town of Aveyron, France. His origins are unknown, but a scar on his neck suggests that he was possibly stabbed by his parents when abandoned as a young child. Diagnosed as mentally impaired, he is relegated to an asylum. A young doctor named Jean Itard, who specializes in ear-nose-throat physiology and the education of deaf-mutes, becomes convinced that the boy has normal mental capacity, but that his development was hindered by lack of contact with society.

He brings the boy home, names him Victor, and begins an arduous attempt at education over several years. Francois Truffaut's The Wild Child reflects the director's lifelong fascination with childhood and his deep commitment to reforms in child-rearing.


  1. FRENCH A2 Intermediate Film Study.
  2. Feral children.
  3. Reina Yuki sexy photo book (Japanese Edition).
  4. Mud Season!
  5. While his celebrated feature debut The Four Hundred Blows depicted a semi-fictionalized version of his own adolescence, for this film Truffaut turned to a widely-studied historical case that he encountered in a review of a book on feral children by Lucas Malson. That book has been translated into English under the title Wolf Children and the Problem of Human Nature and includes translations of Jean Itard's two reports from and on the wild boy of Aveyron.