Committed to the State Asylum

Insanity and Society in Nineteenth-Century Quebec and Ontario

By James E. Moran
Categories: Health & Medicine
Series: McGill-Queen's/Associated Medical Services Studies in the History of Medicine, Health, and Society
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773521223, 216 pages, January 2001
Paperback : 9780773521896, 216 pages, November 2001
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773568839, 216 pages, January 2001

Description

Unlike other studies, Committed to the State Asylum shows the important role that the community played in shaping the asylum and tackles the thorny issue of state development, explaining how state asylums developed differently in each province. He considers Canada?s pioneering institutional efforts at dealing with the criminally insane and why those efforts lasted only a short time, shedding new light on the debate about the nature and extent of state involvement in nineteenth-century Canadian society. Committed to the State Asylum offers new insights into the ways in which both ordinary families and the state understood and responded to those they thought had crossed the boundaries of sane behaviour.

Reviews

"A very valuable contribution to the historiography of psychiatric medicine. By relying heavily on primary records dealing with patient committal and relations among the many interested parties in asylum medicine in Ontario and Quebec history, Moran does something truly original and profound." Ian R. Dowbiggin, Department of History, University of Prince Edward Island "Sound scholarship. The empirical base of the book is solid. Moran displays a sound command of the secondary literature and of the on-going historiographical debates on the nature of the nineteenth-century psychiatric experience." Thomas E. Brown, Humanities, Mount Royal College "The author has an excellent understanding of historiography. The book is very accurate, and Moran's analyses are both careful and meticulous." André Cellard, Department of History, University of Ottawa