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Models of madness in Victorian asylum practice
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
During the past few years there has been a rapid growth of interest in the sociological history of psychiatry. Prior to this, the history of psychiatry had been left largely to the psychiatric historian, who tended to proceed, as Thomas Szasz claimed, ‘as a socially neutral person, discovering the historical “facts” when in truth, he is a psychiatric propagandist, actively shaping the image of his discipline’ (1). Writers such as Michel Foucault, Vieda Skultans, Andrew Scull, David Rothman, Klaus Doerner, and Szasz himself have attempted to underline, as Skultans says, ‘the specific uses to which psychiatry has been put in the past, in order to make a more general claim about the nature of psychiatry as such’ (2). This aim, however, is not always made fully explicit (3). In this paper it will be argued that psychiatry, viewed as a historically constituted social activity, was characterised by a dualism. It was constituted by a medical or curative model of practice, in that psychiatry developed as a branch of medicine. Yet the ‘diseases’ which psychiatrists have historically come to regard as part of their field competence are distinguished by at least two criteria: first, their symptoms consist primarily of actions that are highly inappropriate to their social context; secondly, that their etiology is ambiguous. It will be argued here that an ambiguity regarding the etiology of mental disorder, which is often seen as both physically and psychologically caused, was central to psychiatric discourse.
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- Comprendre Les Cas Extrêmes
- Information
- European Journal of Sociology / Archives Européennes de Sociologie , Volume 22 , Issue 2 , December 1981 , pp. 229 - 264
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- Copyright © Archives Européenes de Sociology 1981
References
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(7) Scull, Museums of Madness, ch. VII, discusses the reasons given by alienists for this increase in insanity.
(8) Patients removed to other asylums are included in these ‘resolved’ cases, and it could be argued that these are really part of a ‘circulating’ chronic population. Removals were rare from Lancaster: only three from the first, and sixteen from the later batch. At Brookwood, removal accounts for 17.5 % of the 1870s and 6.3 % of the 1890s batch.
(9) These figures exclude those discharged to the care of a relative, or not improved, but include those discharged relieved or discharged recovered.
(10) There is, of course, the question of the re-admission rate. This is difficult to assess. Granville quotes an average re-admission rate for Brookwood 1867–74 of 17.05%, against a rate for all County and Borough Asylums of 36.1%. The latter is quite high, although a high re-admission rate is really a feature of institutions with rapid turnovers, not of custodial institutions.
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(18) J. Bucknill and D. H. Tuke, A Manual of Psychological Medicine, 1858 (Reprinted, London, Harper, 1968). When citing textbooks of psychiatry from this period, it is difficult to know how significantly they affected or reflected asylum practice. This work however, was probably widely used, since it went into four editions between 1858 and 1879. Both authors occupied influential professional positions: Bucknill was editor of the Asylum Journal from 1853–62 and a Visitor in Lunacy from 1862–76. Tuke was the great-grandson of William, founder of the Retreat; he also edited the Dictionary of Psychological Medicine, 1891, and wrote Chapters in the History of the Insane in the Brisish Isles, in 1887.
(19) B. Rush, Medical Inquiries (reprinted, New York, Hafner, 1962) argues that the whip is justified when used by a physician or keeper in self-defence. Almost universal avoidance of restraint was reflected in the replies of asylum managers to a survey carried out by the CiL in 1854 (Report No. 9).
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(27) This is not to ignore the process by which physicians came to view insanity as an exclusively medical concern. This is discussed at length by Scull, Museums.
(28) The York Retreat, founded in 1792 opened in 1796, became well known after the publication of S. Tuke'S Description in 1813. This model of asylum management was important in reformers' attempts to have a county asylum system established.
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(50) Ibid. p. 247.
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(52) Brookwood Male Case Book (hereafter B.M.C.B.) z (1869–72), 145. Casebooks are cited as follows: vol. (date), page.
(53) B.M.C.B. 2 (1869–72), 156.
(54) Brookwood Female Case-Book (B.F.C.B.): 3 (1871–73): 21.
(55) B.F.C.B. 3 (1871–73): 194.
(56) Siegler and Osmond, The sick role revisited, op. cit.
(57) Average life expectancy was disputed during the century. See Table VI. The average age of those who died within the year of admission, for both Brookwood batches, was 46.5.
(58) Bucknill, and Tuke, , Manual, pp. 439–43Google Scholar. Pinel, Esquirol, Griesinger, Falret, and Haslam all described what they believed to be physical degeneration associated with general paralysis.
(59) B.M.C.B. 2 (1869–72): 122.
(60) B.M.C.B. 2 (1869–72): 112.
(61) Henry, Organic mental disease, in Zilboorg, and Henry, , History, p. 547Google Scholar.
(62) B.M.C.B. 2 (1869–72): 121.
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(65) Ibid. pp. 443–5.
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(67) Scull, Museums, develops this argument.
(68) Scull, ibid. and Szasz, Manufacture and Myth.
(69) B.F.C.B. 3 (1871–3): 37.
(70) B.M.C.B. I (1867–69): 6.
(71) B.F.C.B. I (1867–75): 49.
(72) Tuke, , Description, p. 156Google Scholar. Conolly, , Inquiry, p. 236Google Scholar.
(73) Lancaster Female Case Books (L.F.C.B.) 3/7 (1878–9): 75.
(74) L.C.B. 1/16 (1849–50): 122.
(75) L.C.B. 1/16 (1849–50): 43.
(76) CiL, No. 7 (1853), P. 7.
(77) L.F.C.B. 3/7 (1878–9): 64.
(78) L.F.C.B. 3/7 (1878–9): 58.
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(80) Granville, , Care and Cure, I, 17–19Google Scholar.
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