New Books in History

Andreas Killen, "Nervous Systems: Brain Science in the Early Cold War" (Harper, 2023)

Feb 4, 2026
Andreas Killen, historian and professor at City College of New York, explores brain science in the early Cold War. He traces 1950s breakthroughs like EEG, awake neurosurgery, and sensory deprivation. He follows how scientific metaphors, Cold War paranoia, and media shaped brainwashing myths and later programs such as MKUltra.
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ANECDOTE

A Bookshop Find Sparked The Project

  • Andreas Killen found Gray Walter's 1953 book The Living Brain in a local bookstore and used it as his project's starting point.
  • That serendipitous discovery opened the archival and narrative pathways for the book.
ANECDOTE

Patients Framed As Separate Clinical Tales

  • Killen interspersed chapters with clinical tales to center patients like H.M. and highlight ethical complexity.
  • He insisted on separate patient sections despite initial publisher hesitation.
INSIGHT

Sensory Deprivation Bridged Psychology And Neurophysiology

  • Donald Hebb's sensory deprivation studies helped pry open the 'black box' of behaviorism.
  • These experiments bridged psychology and neurophysiology and influenced later cognitive neuroscience.
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