Voices in the History of Madness Personal and Professional Perspectives on Mental Health and Illness /

Opis bibliograficzny
Korporacja: SpringerLink (Online service)
Kolejni autorzy: Ellis, Robert (Redaktor), Kendal, Sarah (Redaktor), Taylor, Steven J. (Redaktor)
Streszczenie:XXII, 430 p. 20 illus., 16 illus. in color.
text
Język:angielski
Wydane: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2021.
Wydanie:1st ed. 2021.
Seria:Mental Health in Historical Perspective,
Hasła przedmiotowe:
Dostęp online:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-69559-0
Format: Elektroniczne Książka
Spis treści:
  • 1. Voices in the History of Madness: An Introduction to Patient and Practitioner Perspectives- Rob Ellis, Sarah Kendal and Steven J. Taylor
  • Part I: Shifting Perspectives in The Industry of Madness
  • 2. Accepted and Rejected: Late nineteenth-century application for admission to the Scottish National Institution for the Education of Imbecile Children- Iain Hutchison
  • 3. Mental health in the Vernacular: Print and Counter-hegemonic Approaches to Madness in Colonial Bengal- Pradipto Roy
  • 4. “The root of all evil is inactivity”: The response of French psychiatrists to new approaches to patient work and occupation, 1918-1939- Jane Freebody
  • 5. Distant voices – treatment of mentally ill children at the Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark, c. 1935-1976- Jennie Sejr Junghans
  • Part II Reconstructing Patient Perspectives
  • 6. Experiences of the Madhouse in England, 1650-1810- Leonard Smith
  • 7. “Tells his story quite rationally and collectedly”: Examining the casebooks of the Grahamstown Lunatic Asylum, 1890–1910, for cases of delusion where patients voiced their life stories- Rory du Plessis
  • 8. Dehumanizing Experience, Rehumanizing Self-Awareness: Perception Of Violence In Psychiatric Hospitals Of Soviet Lithuania- Tomas Vaiseta
  • 9. “I Like My Job because It Will Get Me Out Quicker”: Work, Independence, and Disability at Indiana’s Central State Hospital (1986-1993)- Emily Beckman, Elizabeth Nelson and Modupe Labode
  • 10. “More than Bricks and Mortar:” Meaningful Care Practices in the Old State Mental Hospitals- Verusca Calabria, Di Bailey, Graham Bowpitt
  • 11. Patient Photographs, Patient Voices: Recovering Patient Experience in the Nineteenth Century Asylum- Katherine Rawling
  • Part III The Visual and The Material
  • 12. Tracking Traces of the Art Extraordinary Collection- Cheryl McGeachan
  • 13. A boundary between two worlds? Community perceptions of former asylums in Lancashire, England- Carolyn Gibbeson and Katie Beattie
  • Part IV: Mad Studies And Activism
  • 14. Brutal sanity and mad compassion. Tracing the voice of Dorothea Buck- Elena Demke
  • 15. Mad Activists and the Left in Ontario, 1970s to 2000- Geoffrey Reaume
  • 16. Knowing our own minds: transforming the knowledge base of madness and distress- Alison Faulkner
  • 17. Making Public Their Use of History: Reflections on the History of Collective Action by Psychiatric Patients, the Oor Mad History Project and Survivors History Group- Mark Gallagher
  • 18. Often, when I am using my voice… it does not go well. Perspectives on the service user experience- Megan Alikhanizadeh, Corey Hartley, Sarah Kendal, Liz Neill, Gemma Trainor
  • 19. Coda - Speaking Madness: Word, Image, Action- Catharine Coleborne
  • 20 Correction to: Mental Health in the Vernacular: Print and Counter-Hegemonic Approaches to Madness in Colonial Bengal.