Social History of Medicine Advance Access originally published online on October 24, 2006
Social History of Medicine 2006 19(3):425-442; doi:10.1093/shm/hkl042
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Families, Patients and Emotions: Asylums for the Insane in Colonial Australia and New Zealand, c. 18801910
* Department of History, University of Waikato, PB 3105 Hamilton, New Zealand. E-mail: cathyc{at}waikato.ac.nz
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Historians have successfully challenged the social control thesis in relation to nineteenth century insane asylums in many different parts of the world. They have asserted that families were actively involved in committal. Their work has enriched the field, and provided new possibilities for historians researching in asylum archives. Yet despite the very emotional content of these archives, historians have not often specifically examined the question of emotional relationships between the mad and their families. This article examines correspondence and patient case notes, among other archival materials, from four hospitals for the insane in New South Wales, Queensland, Victoria and New Zealand from the 1880s to 1910. This was a critical period in the development of asylum management, and was also shaped by an emerging discourse of modernity expressed through new prescriptions for family roles. Drawing upon existing historical explorations of similar themes in other contexts, the article demonstrates the potential of this approach, to suggest both new paths for historians of psychiatry, families and the asylum, and to engage with histories of the emotions.
Keywords: asylum; insanity; correspondence; committal; friends; expression
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