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Social History of Medicine 1996 9(3):357-382; doi:10.1093/shm/9.3.357
© 1996 by Society for the Social History of Medicine
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Article

European Madness and Gender in Nineteenth-century Birtish India

WALTRAUD ERNST*

* Department of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK.

SUMMARY The aim of this article is to explore whether gender was a linchpin in the construction of Europeans' mental health in nineteenth-century British India. A relational model of gender will be employed which places emphasis on the complemen tarity of men's and women's mental problems within the socio-economic, political and cultural confines of nineteenth-century colonialism. The postulate of a ‘female malady’ which has been promulgated in recent accounts of women's mental health will be shown to be inapplicable in the context of the raj. Instead a reading of the history of mental health in nineteenth-century British India will be suggested which sees different kinds of ‘madness’ coexisting alongside each other, merely incorporating assumptions about gender relations rather than exemplifying any one exclusively female construct of ‘madness’. The primary sources will be female and male patients' case stories and statistics produced in European lunatic asylums in India and Eng

Keywords: Gender; colonialism; mental health; race; social class; empire; military life; lunatic asylums; Victorian Britain; British India


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W. Ernst
Beyond East and West. From the History of Colonial Medicine to a Social History of Medicine(s) in South Asia
Soc Hist Med, December 1, 2007; 20(3): 505 - 524.
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