Scholars of insanity and its historical antecedents have paid very little attention to personal and institutional clothing. Such dress, distributed to patients in mental institutions, has always been inscribed with the conflicting narratives of the period in which it was made and worn. The language of civil and medical authority is more evident than personal choice in the shape and address of the attire. This article examines clothing worn by patients in three Devon mental hospitals during the century before 1960. We consider the ways in which institutional clothing formed part of a hospital regimen of overt control, as well as suiting considerations of economy and employment that figured in these institutions
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed versionThis study contributes t...
In the past, our ideas of psychiatric hospitals and their history have been shaped by objects like s...
This book explores how the body was investigated in the late nineteenth-century asylum in Britain. A...
Scholars of insanity and its historical antecedents have paid very little attention to personal and ...
Aimee M. Allard\u27s dissertation, Fashioning Madness: Clothing in American Women\u27s Asylum Narra...
This open access book demonstrates that, while occupation has been used to treat the mentally disord...
This dissertation examines how colonial force and political circumstance informed the material cultu...
Challenging significant historiography this study argues that the period 1845-1914 was a time in whi...
Within the vast array of literature concerning the county lunatic asylums of the late nineteenth-cen...
The history of psychiatry is not merely the history of psychiatrists; it is also the history of pati...
In the large, expanding Victorian asylums with a small number of medical staff, ruled by a powerful ...
This thesis constitutes a critical analysis of “dress as therapy”. Hitherto unconnected dress-relate...
This research uses the records of the Hampshire County Asylum (HCA) between itsopening in 1852 and t...
This paper explores how the materiality of dress mediates and shapes practices of care in the contex...
The second part of this paper assesses how far the dominant imagery of the (un)dress of the mad poor...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed versionThis study contributes t...
In the past, our ideas of psychiatric hospitals and their history have been shaped by objects like s...
This book explores how the body was investigated in the late nineteenth-century asylum in Britain. A...
Scholars of insanity and its historical antecedents have paid very little attention to personal and ...
Aimee M. Allard\u27s dissertation, Fashioning Madness: Clothing in American Women\u27s Asylum Narra...
This open access book demonstrates that, while occupation has been used to treat the mentally disord...
This dissertation examines how colonial force and political circumstance informed the material cultu...
Challenging significant historiography this study argues that the period 1845-1914 was a time in whi...
Within the vast array of literature concerning the county lunatic asylums of the late nineteenth-cen...
The history of psychiatry is not merely the history of psychiatrists; it is also the history of pati...
In the large, expanding Victorian asylums with a small number of medical staff, ruled by a powerful ...
This thesis constitutes a critical analysis of “dress as therapy”. Hitherto unconnected dress-relate...
This research uses the records of the Hampshire County Asylum (HCA) between itsopening in 1852 and t...
This paper explores how the materiality of dress mediates and shapes practices of care in the contex...
The second part of this paper assesses how far the dominant imagery of the (un)dress of the mad poor...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed versionThis study contributes t...
In the past, our ideas of psychiatric hospitals and their history have been shaped by objects like s...
This book explores how the body was investigated in the late nineteenth-century asylum in Britain. A...