"Andreas Killen's Nervous Systems focuses our attention on the history of “brain science” during the Cold War era, integrating histories of scientific ideas and techniques with a rich cultural history of public concerns about human nature in the age of totalitarianism, the possibility of “brainwashing” and mind control techniques, and the influence of new technologies and media (especially film and television) on our understanding the human mind. . . . I wonder if Killen might have left more room at the close of his book for a sequel – which doubtless, he would be superbly placed to write." — The Journal for the Society of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
“In this compelling and lucidly written book, the historian Andreas Killen identifies the 1950s as the decade that revolutionized brain science, treating it not as a prelude to later developments in the 1980s and 90s, but on its own terms and in its own context. . . . [Killen] argues persuasively that 1950s brain science had two sides: a mind-control side and a transcendental side. . . . One great contribution of Killen’s book is to trace their interconnections to each other and to the brain sciences that fostered both.” — Nadine Weidman
"Brilliant!" — Quinn Slobodian, author of Crack-Up Capitalism and professor of international history at the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University