Part II: Reconstructing Patient PerspectivesĦ Experiences of the Madhouse in England, 1650–1810 ħ “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 Ĩ Dehumanizing Experience, Rehumanizing Self-Awareness: Perception of Violence in Psychiatric Hospitals of Soviet Lithuania ĩ “I Like My Job because It Will Get Me Out Quicker”: Work, Independence, and Disability at Indiana’s Central State Hospital (1986–1993) Part I: Shifting Perspectives in the Industry of MadnessĢ Accepted and Rejected: Late Nineteenth-Century Application for Admission to the Scottish National Institution for the Education of Imbecile Children ģ Mental Health in the Vernacular: Print and Counter-Hegemonic Approaches to Madness in Colonial Bengal Ĥ “The Root of All Evil is Inactivity”: The Response of French Psychiatrists to New Approaches to Patient Work and Occupation, 1918–1939 ĥ Distant Voices: Treatment of Mentally Ill Children at the Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark, c.1935–1976 Robert Ellis, Sarah Kendal, and Steven J.
THE SUFFERER AND THE WITNESS WALLPAPER PROFESSIONAL
1 Voices in the History of Madness: An Introduction to Personal and Professional Perspectives