ABSTRACT

The discovery and treatment of insanity remains one of the most debated and discussed issues in social history.

Focusing on the second half of the nineteenth century, The Politics of Madness provides a new perspective on this important topic, based on research drawn from both local and national material. Within a social and cultural history of the English political and class order, it presents a fresh appraisal of the significance of the asylum in the decades following the creation of a national asylum system in 1845.

Arguing that the new asylums provided a meeting place for different social interests and aspirations, the text asserts that this then marked a transition in provincial power relations from the landed interests to the new coalition of professional, commercial and populist groups, which gained control of the public asylums at the end of the period surveyed.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

The English asylum and its historians

chapter 2|10 pages

The origins of the asylum

chapter 5|24 pages

Journey to the asylum

Residence, distance and migration in admissions to the asylum, 1845–1914

chapter 6|26 pages

Community, friends and family

Asylum, lunatics and the social environment, 1845–1914

chapter 7|20 pages

Reading the rules of domesticity

Gender, insanity and the asylum, 1845–1914

chapter 8|31 pages

Madness and the market

Occupations, class and the asylum, 1845–1914

chapter 10|9 pages

From asylum inmate to outpatient

The remaking of the institutional landscape in the twentieth century, 1914–1990