Academic literature on the topic 'Erotomania'

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Journal articles on the topic "Erotomania"

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Menzies, Robin P. D., J. Paul Fedoroff, Christopher M. Green, and Kari Isaacson. "Prediction of Dangerous Behaviour in Male Erotomania." British Journal of Psychiatry 166, no. 4 (April 1995): 529–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.166.4.529.

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BackgroundNew cases of erotomania in men, plus cases from the literature, were analysed to explore any association between erotomania and dangerousness, and to identify possible predictors.MethodFiles at two in-patient facilities were examined to determine the presence of DSM–III–R delusional disorder, erotomanic type. The sample (13 cases) was divided into dangerous and benign groups on the basis of serious antisocial behaviour directly related to erotomanic delusions. These cases were combined with all reports of erotomania in men (16 cases), found in the English language psychiatric literature, to allow for statistical analysis.ResultsTwo factors, multiple delusional objects (P < 0.0005) and serious antisocial behaviour unrelated to the delusions (P < 0.05), were found to be significantly associated with dangerousness. Using a combination of these two variables it was possible to predict dangerousness with an accuracy of 88.9% (weighted prediction accuracy or ‘hit rate’). We identified no false negatives but three false positives.ConclusionsThe presence of multiple objects, and a history of serious antisocial behaviour unrelated to the erotomanic delusions, are useful predictors of dangerous behaviour in men with erotomania.
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Guillard, V., J. Mallet, and F. Limosin. "Erotomania and mood disorder: A case report and literature review." European Psychiatry 33, S1 (March 2016): S632. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.2375.

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IntroductionErotomania is a rare delusional disorder. De Clerambault, a French psychiatrist, was the first who advanced the concept of pure erotomania, one of the “passionate psychosis”, as a distinct disorder. However, some authors tend to consider this syndrome as related to other psychiatric disorders.ObjectivesTo describe the case of a female patient with erotomanic delusion with no remission under an antipsychotic and to review the links between erotomania and other psychiatric disorders.MethodsLiterature review and a case report.ResultsWe report the case of a 32 year-old epileptic woman, hospitalized for a delusional erotomanic disorder. Initially, the patient was treated with an antipsychotic, with partial effectiveness. In fact, it appeared that the conviction of being loved began while she was depressed. After one month of combined antipsychotic and antidepressive medication, she became euthymic and her erotomanic delusions disappeared. Major depressive disorder with psychotic symptoms was diagnosed. After reviewing the literature we found that erotomanic symptoms frequently appear secondarily in other psychiatric disorders. Several publications indicate a frequent association between erotomania and mood disorder, especially bipolar affective disorder and major depression, and describe the efficacy of antidepressant and mood stabilizers. Numerous theories may explain the link between erotomania and mood disorder: from narcissistic needs, to the capacity of empathy and emotional processing. Further studies are needed to clarify the nature of this link.ConclusionIn clinical practice, a mood disorder must systematically be searched for and treated in a patient with erotomanic delusions.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Phillips, Michael R., Charles L. West, and Ruiwen Wang. "Erotomanic Symptoms in 42 Chinese Schizophrenic Patients." British Journal of Psychiatry 169, no. 4 (October 1996): 501–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.169.4.501.

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BackgroundReports on erotomania frequently include schizophrenic patients with secondary erotomania, but there are no reports on the prevalence and characteristics of erotomanic symptoms in schizophrenic patients.MethodA structured item on erotomanic delusions was added to the Chinese version of the Scale for Assessment of Positive Symptoms and administered to 448 randomly selected schizophrenic patients on admission to four psychiatric hospitals in China.ResultsErotomanic symptoms were identified in 9.4% of the patients (42/448; 95% CI 6.9–12.4%); 4.5% (20/448; CI 2.8–6.8%) had erotomanic ideation and 4.9% (22/448; CI 3.1–7.4%) had fixed erotomanic delusions. Compared with patients without erotomanic symptoms, erotomanic patients were more likely to be male and unmarried, and they had a higher level of education, more severe grandiose delusions, more prominent hostility, and less severe negative symptoms.ConclusionThe relatively common occurrence of erotomanic symptoms in Chinese schizophrenic patients may be related to the indirect manner of expressing sexual interest in Chinese culture and, thus, be an example of the cultural moulding of psychiatric symptoms.
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Gagné, Pierre, and Lucie Desparois. "L'érotomanie Mâle: Un Type De Harcèlement Sexuel Dangereux." Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 40, no. 3 (April 1995): 136–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/070674379504000305.

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Objective The purpose of our study is to examine male erotomania and its consequences for women who are victims of it. Method We studied the clinical characteristics of erotomaniacal men and the physical and psychic consequences to women who were their victims. Results The men we met have a severe paranoid thought disorder which combines jealousy, projection and interpretation. Their behaviour is characterized by escalating violence in their involvement with women by whom they believe they are loved. During their contacts with the erotomaniac, the victims develop adjustment disorders and anxiety. Conclusion Our study leads us to conclude that erotomaniacs and their victims have symptoms and a clinical evolution identical to those found in harassing and violent ex-spouses. The positive response of some erotomaniacs to antipsychotic medication raises a therapeutic prospect for other violent men with the same thought disorders.
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Pereira, E., F. Coutinho, A. S. Machado, and C. Reis. "Erotomania: A psychodynamic overview." European Psychiatry 41, S1 (April 2017): s827. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1618.

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IntroductionErotomania is a delusional disorder in which one believes to be loved by someone else. Even though its etiology is not known, psychodynamic factors have been proposed as a possible explanation.ObjectivesTo review the psychodynamic etiology of erotomania.MethodsA search of the Medline/Pubmed database was conducted using the terms “erotomania” and “psychodynamic”.ResultsSeveral authors wrote about the psychodynamic etiology of erotomania. Kraepelin describes it as a “compensation for the disappointments of life”. De Clérambault highlights the idea of “sexual pride”: stimulated by the absence of affective and sexual approval, erotomania flourishes as a way of satisfying the individual's pride. Hollender and Callahan explain the disorder as a result of an ego deficit of not feeling attractive enough. According to Segal, the erotomanic delusion meets the patient's need for love and it is related to the idea of it as the ultimate way of approval. Taylor highlights the patients’ isolation, loneliness and extreme dependence on others.ConclusionsAbout every author agrees with the idea that the erotomanic delusion acts as a gratification to the individual's narcissistic needs, when personal experience has failed to do so. Wanting to be loved is the core of human motivation and the delusion most commonly appears in people who feel rejected by society; facing that perceived rejection, it emerges as the fantasy that other human being is in love with them. This is a relevant overview of this disorder with implications in patients’ treatment, since psychotherapy could be important along with drug treatment.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Ghaziuddin, M., and L. Tsai. "Depression-Dependent Erotomanic Delusions in a Mentally Handicapped Woman." British Journal of Psychiatry 158, no. 1 (January 1991): 127–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.158.1.127.

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Erotomanic delusions occurred in a depressed mentally handicapped woman. Although erotomania is generally classified with paranoid disorders, in people with mental handicap, depression may be the more commonly associated illness.British Journal of Psychiatry (1991), 158, 127–129
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Kelly, Brendan D. "Love as delusion, delusions of love: erotomania, narcissism and shame." Medical Humanities 44, no. 1 (July 8, 2017): 15–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/medhum-2017-011198.

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Erotomania has a long, colourful history in psychiatry. It is a rare condition in which the patient (‘subject’) develops the belief that he or she is loved from afar by another person (‘object’). The subject is generally female, though men predominate in forensic samples. The object is generally perceived to belong to a higher social class, reflecting a sociopolitical element in the construction of love. Erotomania requires active treatment and risk management as it can be associated with stalking and other offending behaviour. In addition to featuring in the psychiatry literature, erotomania features in the biography of the economist John Maynard Keynes (the apparent ‘object’ of a woman’s erotomanic delusions in the early 1900s) and in fiction (eg, Ian McEwan’s Enduring Love); this reflects, in part, the general popularity of romantic themes in broader literature and society. In psychological terms, certain cases of erotomania might be underpinned by combinations of longing, disappointment, shame and narcissism in specific social contexts. Lesser forms of delusional exaggeration of true love might also exist in some stable relationships, and might even be essential for their continued existence. Overall, the division between love and delusions of love is not as distinct as one might imagine. The potential presence of an element of delusional love in many relationships might well serve important social functions, conferring specific advantages on the parties involved and increasing social and community stability. After all, delusions persist; love dies.
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Militello, Jennifer. "Erotomania." Iowa Review 46, no. 2 (September 2016): 58. http://dx.doi.org/10.17077/0021-065x.7735.

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Kelly, Brendan D. "Erotomania." CNS Drugs 19, no. 8 (2005): 657–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/00023210-200519080-00002.

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Signer, Stephen F. "Erotomania." Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 36, no. 3 (April 1991): 237. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/070674379103600328.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Erotomania"

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Bressanelli, Juliana. "A erotomania como resposta psicótica aos impasses do amor." Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1843/TMCB-7WYM2B.

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This work of dissertation consists of approaching the concept of Erotomania as a response given by the psychotic for the question that is presented to the human being, caused by the contingency inherent to the encounter with the loving partner. We establish how love sets up a problem to the human being and we work this perspective pointing the specificity of Erotomania in its differentiation with the response given by the neurotic, which is, the loving transference. We present two clinical cases that allow us to exemplify and to oppose these two types of response. Considerations are also made referring to the theoretical and clinical importance, essentially, about the position of the analyst in the transference and the possibility of its handling in the clinic of the psychoses.
Esse trabalho de dissertação consiste em abordar o conceito de Erotomania como uma resposta dada pelo sujeito psicótico para a questão que se apresenta ao ser humano, provocada pela contingência inerente ao encontro com o parceiro amoroso. Estabelecemos de que forma o amor se coloca como problema para o ser humano e trabalhamos essa perspectiva apontando para a especificidade da Erotomania em sua diferenciação com a resposta dada pelo sujeito neurótico, qual seja, o amor de transferência. Para tanto, apresentamos dois casos clínicos, que nos permitem exemplificar e contrapor esses dois tipos de resposta. São feitas ainda considerações que se referem à importância teórica e clínica, essencialmente, quanto à postura do analista na transferência e a possibilidade de seu manejo na clínica das psicoses.
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Tanguy, Chantal. "Contribution à la psychopathologie de la vie amoureuse : le « cas » Adèle Hugo, entre lignages et ruptures : une clinique de la passion." Thesis, Rennes 2, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011REN20047.

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Adèle Hugo est née entre deux révolutions, l’une littéraire, l’autre politique. La dernière-née Hugo a été annoncée par son père comme « un ouvrage promettant de vivre ». Nous nous sommes laissés enseigner par la position subjective de la jeune femme et nous avons pu repérer comment à partir de cette inscription, assignation en tant qu’objet, Adèle s’estconstruite. Sa vie fut marquée de ruptures, la première se fit à sa naissance, la séparation de ses parents ; puis ce fut le mariage et le décès de sa soeur ; et enfin l’exil, celui imposé par son père, puis les siens. Adèle qui n’était pas la préférée d’aucun de ses parents a tout mis en oeuvre pour devenir, elle aussi « la fille exceptionnelle » de cet homme hors ducommun. En vain. C’est en écrivant, dans une « langue nouvelle » qu’elle confie ses états d’âme. Son écrit, travail de la lettre lui permet de maintenir une existence presque normale, jusqu’au jour où elle a rencontré le lieutenant Pinson et que sa soeur par la pratique spirite lui dicta sa conduite : « ma soeur, aime-le ! »
Adèle Hugo was born between two revolutions : the literary one and the political one known as The French Revolution. The last-born, she has been introduced by her father as « a work promising to live ». We learnt thanks to Adèle how a fore-written inscription, this ascription as an object, determined the young woman’s subjective position; therefore,we have been able to see her psychic construction. Her life had been marked by many breaks. The first one, at birth, her parents get assunder ; the second was the mariage and the death of her sister, then the imposed exile by her father, and at last her own exiles. Adèle who was not the favorite daugther, made all her best to become « the exceptional daugther » of this extraordinary man. To no avail. Writing in « a new langage », she consignes her spirit. Her writing, work of the letter, allowed her to have a nearly normal life, till the day she met Leutenant Pinson ; her sister, through spiritism told her « mysister, love him ! »
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Rodda, Sally. "Yellow roses in Fortitude Valley." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2005. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/16175/1/Sally_Rodda_-_Yellow_Roses_in_Fortitude_Valley.pdf.

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This exegesis interrogates the mental illness Pure Erotomania, the rare delusional disorder which presents with the sufferer having the delusional (and therefore unshakeable) belief that the person they objectify is in love with them. My play Yellow Roses in Fortitude Valley is about one woman's emotional journey as she is relentlessly stalked by a Pure Erotomanic male. It is a fascinating mental illness, which includes all the 'box office type' features, which make it an exciting and frightening subject to write a dramatic work about. It is confusing, illusory, surreal and frightening, but best of all for the writer and audience it is a real human condition. Yellow Roses in Fortitude Valley is written in a style that truthfully represents and portrays the journey and struggle for both the victim and the sufferer. The research undertaken for both the play and exegesis was a hybrid of many overlapping disciplines involved in the current discourse. As a recently diagnosed and recognized disorder, it is still new territory for professionals in the field and for audience members. I believe this makes it an opportune time for an academically researched creative project to enter into current discourse. Previous creative works on this topic, some of which I have interrogated, have approached the issue of stalking as a predator/victim scenario, an unrequited love or a domestic violence situation. I wished to portray the stalking as a mental illness in the form of the psychiatric disorder Erotomania, my approach undertaking to explain victim impact and the prolonged and chronic course of Erotomanic stalking. I also wished to illustrate the underlying themes which I uncovered during my research, being; female victims of sex crimes; dominant patriarchal ideology; and the current interventions in stalking by the legal and mental health systems.
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Rodda, Sally. "Yellow roses in Fortitude Valley." Queensland University of Technology, 2005. http://eprints.qut.edu.au/16175/.

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This exegesis interrogates the mental illness Pure Erotomania, the rare delusional disorder which presents with the sufferer having the delusional (and therefore unshakeable) belief that the person they objectify is in love with them. My play Yellow Roses in Fortitude Valley is about one woman's emotional journey as she is relentlessly stalked by a Pure Erotomanic male. It is a fascinating mental illness, which includes all the 'box office type' features, which make it an exciting and frightening subject to write a dramatic work about. It is confusing, illusory, surreal and frightening, but best of all for the writer and audience it is a real human condition. Yellow Roses in Fortitude Valley is written in a style that truthfully represents and portrays the journey and struggle for both the victim and the sufferer. The research undertaken for both the play and exegesis was a hybrid of many overlapping disciplines involved in the current discourse. As a recently diagnosed and recognized disorder, it is still new territory for professionals in the field and for audience members. I believe this makes it an opportune time for an academically researched creative project to enter into current discourse. Previous creative works on this topic, some of which I have interrogated, have approached the issue of stalking as a predator/victim scenario, an unrequited love or a domestic violence situation. I wished to portray the stalking as a mental illness in the form of the psychiatric disorder Erotomania, my approach undertaking to explain victim impact and the prolonged and chronic course of Erotomanic stalking. I also wished to illustrate the underlying themes which I uncovered during my research, being; female victims of sex crimes; dominant patriarchal ideology; and the current interventions in stalking by the legal and mental health systems.
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LORIOT, PIERRE. "L'erotomanie : reflexions a propos de 3 observations." Lyon 1, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992LYO1M200.

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VEYSSEYRE, ANNICK. "Contribution a l'etude de l'erotomanie : a propos de l'illusion delirante d'etre aime et de la foi mystique." Nantes, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990NANT115M.

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Poslušná, Kateřina. "Nebezpečné pronásledování - kriminologické a trestněprávní aspekty." Master's thesis, 2011. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-300172.

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This thesis would like to inform the reader of a new crime in the Czech republic which is dangerous pursuit (stalking) and it aims at analysis of current legislation. It attemps to define dangerous pursuit, the emergence of this phenomenon from a historical point of view as well as its current interpretation. It also covers the penalties that can be imposed on the criminals. Moreover, it also looks at victims of dangerous pursuit and effective ways of helping the victims as well as the criminals.
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Books on the topic "Erotomania"

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Levy, Francis. Erotomania: A romance : a novel. [Brooklyn, NY]: Two Dollar Radio, 2008.

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Dalle, Benoît. Bien que mon amour soit fou: Érotomanies : du regard à une écoute. Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo pour le progrès de la connaissance, 1998.

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León, Miguel Efraín Sedek. Estudio de la psicosis a partir del fenómeno erotomaníaco: Consideraciones epistemológicas desde sus orígines en la psiquiatría clásica hasta la concepción psicoanalítica de Freud y Lacan. Valencia, Venezuela: Universidad de Carabobo, 1996.

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Orion, Doreen. I know you really love me: A psychiatrist's journal of erotomania, stalking, and obsessive love. New York: Macmillan, 1997.

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Collard, Quinn. The mental illness issue. Friendswood, TX: Frustrated&Sad Ltd., 2007.

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Paola, Daniel. Erotomanía, paranoia y celos. Rosario, Argentina: Homo Sapiens Ediciones, 1997.

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Möhr, Andrea. Liebeswahn: Phänomenologie und Psychodynamik der Erotomanie. Stuttgart: Enke, 1987.

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Hülsmanns, Dieter. Erinnerungen eines Erotomanen: Vier Erzählungen. Aachen: Rimbaud, 1992.

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Magdalena, Wagnerová, ed. Erotomanie: [výbor z milosných próz české klasické literatury. Praha: Plot, 2004.

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Gibson, Ian. The Erotomaniac: The Secret Life of Henry Spencer Ashbee. London: Faber and Faber, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Erotomania"

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Brüne, Martin. "Erotomania." In Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, 1–3. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-16999-6_2503-1.

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Brüne, Martin. "Erotomania." In Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, 2395–97. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-19650-3_2503.

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Weibin, Melvyn Zhang, Cyrus Ho Su Hui, Roger Ho, and Basant K. Puri. "Delusion of love/erotomania." In Get Through MRCPsych CASC, 33–35. 2nd ed. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003313113-13.

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Weibin, Melvyn Zhang, Cyrus Ho Su Hui, Roger Ho, and Basant K. Puri. "Erotomania and stalking (patient management)." In Get Through MRCPsych CASC, 341–43. 2nd ed. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003313113-124.

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Weibin, Melvyn Zhang, Cyrus Ho Su Hui, Roger Ho, and Basant K. Puri. "Erotomania and stalking behaviour (history taking)." In Get Through MRCPsych CASC, 338–40. 2nd ed. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003313113-123.

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Ellenbroek, Bart, Alfonso Abizaid, Shimon Amir, Martina de Zwaan, Sarah Parylak, Pietro Cottone, Eric P. Zorrilla, et al. "Erotomania (Also Known as De Clerambault's Syndrome)." In Encyclopedia of Psychopharmacology, 490. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-68706-1_3236.

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Shaw, Eric D. "Putting together the CPIR and psycholinguistics—corporate leaks and erotomania." In The Psychology of Insider Risk, 117–37. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003388104-7.

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Smith, Wendy Ligon. "The Cry of Silk: Erotomania and Fetishism in Au Bonheur des Dames." In Shopping and the Senses, 1800-1970, 101–19. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-90335-0_6.

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Opjordsmoen, S., and N. RetterstøL. "Erotomanie: Nosologie und Langzeitverlauf." In Paranoide Störungen, 43–51. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-84777-6_4.

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Romanets, Maryna. "Introduction to Erotomaniac Fictions." In Ukrainian Erotomaniac Fictions: First Postindependence Wave, 1–23. New York : Routledge, 2019. | Series: Routledge studies in twentieth-century literature: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351022187-1.

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