Language and Language Disturbances: Aphasic symptom complexes and their significance for medicine and theory of language
By
Kurt Goldstein, M.D.
New York: Grune & Stratton, 1948
Preface
Part one. The origin of aphasic symptoms
-  1. The problem and the origin of symptoms in brain damage
      -  a. Direct symptoms
          - i. Symptoms due to dedifferentiation of function
- ii. Symptoms due to separation of an undamaged area from a damaged one
 
- b. Indirect or depending symptoms
- c. Symptoms due to catastrophic conditions
- d. Symptoms due to fatigue and perseveration
 
-  a. Direct symptoms
          
- 2. The organismic approach to brain pathology in general
-  3. The organismic approach to aphasia
      - a. The purpose of language and the problem of meaning
- b. Concrete and abstract language
-  c. The disturbances of language due to pathology
          - i. The significance of images for disturbed and normal language
- ii. The aphasic symptom complexes as expression of dedifferentiation of language due to pathology
 
-  d. What can we learn from research on normal language for the interpretation
          of aphasic symptoms?
          - i. Significance of research in psychology of language
- ii. Significance of research in philosophy of language
- iii. Significance of research in linguistics
- iv. Significance of research in child psychology
- v. Some similarities between the development of language and defects in aphasics
 
- e. The organismic approach to the problem of localization of language and language disturbances
 
-  4. Survey of the various forms of disturbance of language in pathology
      - a. Disturbances of language by impairment of abstract attitude
- b. Rational and emotional language in pathology
- c. Disturbances in finding of words
- d. Disturbances of repetition of heard language
-  e. Disturbances of the expressive side of language
          - i. Dysarthria
- ii. Motor aphasia
- iii. The origin or paraphasia
- iv. Central motor aphasia
- v. Severe motor aphasia due to lesions in the temporal lobe
 
- f. Disturbances of the receptive side of language
- g. Disturbances of inner speech
- h. Disturbances of "intelligence" in aphasic patients
- i. Disturbances of reading and writing
- j. Disturbances of the calculating capacity
- k. Disturbances of gestures in aphasic patients
- l. Disturbances of language in polyglot individuals with aphasia
- m. Disturbances of musical performance
- n. Nomenclature
- o. Examination
 
Part 2. Case reports, pathologic anatomy, treatment
-  5. Pictures in which disturbances of the expressive side are in the
      foreground
      - a. Peripheral motor aphasia
- b. Central motor aphasia
 
-  6. Pictures in which disturbances of the receptive side are in the foreground
      - a. Peripheral sensory aphasia
 
- 7. Central aphasia
- 8. Amnesic aphasia
-  9. Pictures of speech disturbances due to disturbances of non-language
      mental processes
      -  a. The transcortical aphasias
          - i. Motor
- ii. Sensory
- iii. Mixed forms
- iv. Echolalia
 
- b. Other types of speech disturbances due to impairment of the non-language mental performances
 
-  a. The transcortical aphasias
          
-  10. Treatment
      - a. General remarks
- b. Training of patients with motor speech defects
- c. Training in disturbances of reading
- d. Training in disturbances of writing
- e. Treatment in disturbances of word finding
 
Concluding remarks
Bibliographies
Index
