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Zusatztext 'The book is rich in findings founded on a strong evidential base and will be of interest not only to historians of medicine and social policy! but also those of gender! society and politics! as well as to historical geographers and sociologists ... An admirable book that should bea model for further contextualized studies of asylums in particular and regional medical cultures more generally that are needed in Britain and Ireland.' - The Economic History Review'There is no doubt that The Politics of Madness is a major contribution that illuminates both the history of psychiatry and social policy.' - Journal of the History of Medicine Informationen zum Autor Joseph Melling (University of Exeter, UK) (Author) , Bill Forsythe (University of Exeter, UK) (Author) Zusammenfassung Within a social and cultural history of the English political and class order, this text presents a fresh appraisal of the significance of the asylum in the decades following the creation of a national asylum system in 1845. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Introduction: The English Asylum and its Historians 2 The Origins of the Asylum 3 The Asylum and the British State in the administration of pauper lunacy! 1845-1914 4 The Ethos of Treatment! Care and Management at the Asylum! 1845-1914 5 Journey to the Asylum: Residence! distance and migration in admissions to the Asylum! 1845-1914 6 Community! Friends and Family: Asylum! Lunatics and the social environment! 1845-1914 7 Reading the Rules of Domesticity: Gender! insanity and the asylum! 1845-1914 8 Madness and the Market: Occupations! class and the asylum! 1845-1914 9 The Patient Experience of the Pauper and Private Asylum 10 From Asylum Inmate to Outpatient: The remaking of the institutional landscape in the Twentieth Century! 1914-1990