The iconic image of the lunatic asylum is one that often leaves us wondering what went on inside these imposing buildings.
In this new book, Juliana Cummings first questions what behaviors and characteristics define insanity and leads us through a comprehensive history of insanity and the asylum from the early treatment and care of mental illness in the Middle Ages and early modern period through to the closure of mental institutions in the twentieth century.
Throughout the years, we learn of how the treatments and institutional structures for caring for the mentally ill developed and changed. The Age of Enlightenment and the rise of humanitarian reform was followed by the emergence of the insane asylum in the 1800s, which saw the beginning of the widespread constructions of asylums.
We explore the different reasons for admittance, as well as the vast array of treatments. It shows that your treatment as an inmate of an asylum could vary depending on your gender and your social class.
Although once thought of as criminals, the mentally ill were gradually treated with care. Juliana discusses the different treatments used over time as attitudes towards the mentally ill changed, such as drug use, psychosurgery and insulin therapy. We learn of the regulations and reforms that led to the closure of asylums, how their closure affected society and consider how the mentally ill are treated today.
This insightful new history helps us to better understand the haunting past of the asylum and leads us down a fascinating road to where we come to an understanding of a time in history that is often mistaken.
Author(s): Juliana Cummings
Publisher: Pen and Sword History
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 267
City: Barnsley
Cover
Book Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter One Understanding Insanity and the Pioneers Who Defined Mental Illness
Chapter Two Mental Illness in the Early Middle
Ages and the Birth of Bedlam
Chapter Three Caring for the Insane During the Fifteenth, Sixteenth & Seventeenth Centuries
Chapter Four The Age of Enlightenment and the Influence of the Quaker Movement
Chapter Five The Emergence of the Asylum
Plate
Chapter Six Women and Children in the Victorian Era Asylum
Chapter Seven Life in a Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Asylum. Daily Living, Patient Abuse, and Those That Pushed for
Reform
Chapter Eight Nineteenth and Twentieth CenturyTreatments for Mental Illness and the
Breakthrough of Psychopharmacology
Chapter Nine The Eugenics Movement and the
Mentally Ill
Chapter Ten The Closure of the Asylums
Bibliography
About the Author
Index
Back cover