Alison\u27s presentation draws from thirty-one mothers\u27 mental patient files, including a family member, from one mental institution in Melbourne, Australia from the interwar years: 1920 to 1936. Alison uses feminist, historical approaches in her research to investigate the relationship between gender, motherhood, and mental disorder in the early twentieth century, Australian context
© 2012 Dr. Caitlin Sue MurraySet in Australia during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuri...
This thesis entitled Mothering and Mental illness: An Ethnography of Attachment in an Institutional ...
In nineteenth-century Fremantle, marital cruelty (domestic violence) could lead to a woman’s assessm...
This paper examines how mothers’ insanity was constructed in Victoria, Australia, in an early twenti...
Aim. This study analysed historical healthcare records to investigate how women diagnosed with mania...
Puerperal insanity, was a term used extensively throughout the 19th century and generally is underst...
In the present study, we investigated a unique set of historical health-care records of women admitt...
During the earliest days of the penal colony in New South Wales in 1788, the plight of the mentally ...
Historically, mental illness has often gone untreated or treated inadequately, especially in women. ...
Mental illness in the United States has been part of a complex history. Many details of mental hospi...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2001 Phillip M. Maude.This study investigates the develo...
This article examines how female immigrants were characterised inside the Yarra Bend Asylum in Melbo...
This paper presents a history of mental health nursing in Victoria, Australia from 1848 to the 1950\...
It has been claimed that madness is a “female malady”. This claim has been supported by the fact tha...
In line with international trends, women represent Australia’s fastest growing prison population. Th...
© 2012 Dr. Caitlin Sue MurraySet in Australia during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuri...
This thesis entitled Mothering and Mental illness: An Ethnography of Attachment in an Institutional ...
In nineteenth-century Fremantle, marital cruelty (domestic violence) could lead to a woman’s assessm...
This paper examines how mothers’ insanity was constructed in Victoria, Australia, in an early twenti...
Aim. This study analysed historical healthcare records to investigate how women diagnosed with mania...
Puerperal insanity, was a term used extensively throughout the 19th century and generally is underst...
In the present study, we investigated a unique set of historical health-care records of women admitt...
During the earliest days of the penal colony in New South Wales in 1788, the plight of the mentally ...
Historically, mental illness has often gone untreated or treated inadequately, especially in women. ...
Mental illness in the United States has been part of a complex history. Many details of mental hospi...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2001 Phillip M. Maude.This study investigates the develo...
This article examines how female immigrants were characterised inside the Yarra Bend Asylum in Melbo...
This paper presents a history of mental health nursing in Victoria, Australia from 1848 to the 1950\...
It has been claimed that madness is a “female malady”. This claim has been supported by the fact tha...
In line with international trends, women represent Australia’s fastest growing prison population. Th...
© 2012 Dr. Caitlin Sue MurraySet in Australia during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuri...
This thesis entitled Mothering and Mental illness: An Ethnography of Attachment in an Institutional ...
In nineteenth-century Fremantle, marital cruelty (domestic violence) could lead to a woman’s assessm...