Whig history
a historical narrative that frames the past as a sequence of events leading up to the present through increasing enlightenment and progression. This term is often used to criticise narratives and writings
What is madness? (1700s)
Madness before the 18th Century
treated madness in similar ways:
- trepanning
- religious ceremonies
- beatings
Hospitals to house those deemed mad in Europe detained or confined individuals, and it was not until later that care and treatment of patients became a priority as asylums emerged and medicine became responsible for managing mental illness
Social History
subfield within history that seeks to understand historical social groups and structures, often with a particular focus on traditionally marginalised groups
How did they treat madness in the 18th century?
medicalisation
the process where a condition becomes understood as something should be treated by physicians
Example: antisocial disorders (some people are just shy!)
Factors contributing to the medicalisation of mental illness
The long process of medicalisation
Pre-1700s: madness, natural and supernatural causes, porto-medical explanations
Late 1700s: medicalisation and asylums
1800s: psychological explanations and growing influence of psychiatry, physical treatments (shock treatment and psychosurgery), and psychotherapy
Large shifts (18th century compared to today)
The transformation into mental illness and rise of the asylum
Late 18th century as transition point - emergence of “mental illness”
- medical definition and medical treatment becoming dominant
- mental illness: a problem for medicine and medical professionals
19th century - emergence of large state-run mental hospitals in Europe and colonies
- Diverse patients and diagnoses: mania, melancholy, “insanity”
- Physician led and operated - specialised medical knowledge of mental illness
The development of asylums
How does urbanisation factor into the emergence of mental illness and asylums? How were problems related to mental illness viewed differently in cities?
Humoral Theory
Hippocrates humoral theory of illness proposed that the body consisted of 4 humours: black bile (melancholic), yellow bile (choleric temperament), blood (sanguine), and phlegm (phlegmatic).
Therefore, if someone was too sad they had too much black bile, and if someone was manic they either had too much blood or yellow bile.
critiques of the asylum era
what is moral treatment?
Social control in asylums
Debates on the causes of mental illnesses: nature (genetics) vs nurture (environment, experience)
How did the psychiatrist Emil Kraeplin view mental illness?
mental illness was broad term including series of discrete diseases- each had its own symptoms, and natural course (quite consistent with current psychology view in the DSM)
Unconscious view of mental illness
problems were psychological rooted in the mind and personal experience
Sigmund Freud
Contributions from Freud
critiques of psychoanalytic theory (freud)
War trauma
Treatment for war trauma
WHR Rivers: a medical doctor and anthropologist at hospital in Scotland