This is the search box that appears on the Yale University Library home page. Use Quicksearch and enter search terms in the box to get started searching. Don't worry about being too precise at first; you can easily narrow down your results later by clicking on the results and using the choices on the left hand side.
In your results screen, you'll notice a quilt of results, in all kinds of genres and formats. Click on the column on the left to help narrow your results.
Catalog records for books include linked subjects, which work similar to #hashtags: when you click on a linked subject, you will return results from the catalog of more books on that same subject.
Other subjects and keywords to consider when searching for books on this topic, pairing these with other search terms, like specific countries, and the term "history":
For example, try this linked subject: Antipsychiatry > United States > History.
Some search terms that might help surface books and other materials, in combination with the words "history" and/or "United States":
antipsychiatry or anti-psychiatry
mental illness
mental health
madness and decolonization
radical psychiatry
psychiatric reform
transcultural psychiatry (which is even a journal!)
global mental health
cross-cultural psychiatry
community mental health
Life magazine from May 6th, 1946
Do you know that you can find primary sources and popular magazines and journals on Google Books?
Here are the steps!
Be aware that books before 1923 are more likely to be fully available online, because of U.S. copyright law. Libraries digitized many of their books before 1923. After 1923, you may find government publications fully online or previews of certain books.
Google also provides free access to a number of magazines, like Life magazine (one of the most popular magazines between 1950-1970, full of health and medicine articles and advertisements), Ebony and Jet (for African-American audiences). Click on any of these links, or on any cover of one of the magazines, and you'll see an option to "Search all issues" that you can click right under the search box:
You can search for your topic through all the issues, so no need to click on each cover! While you can't download the magazines, you have free access to all the content.
Don't forget to use Google Scholar for articles, which you can also narrow down to certain dates. And make sure you are logged into Yale's VPN, as Google Scholar connects to our VPN to give you access to articles.