In 1869 the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Virginia passed legislation that established the first asylum in the United States to care exclusively for African-American patients. Then known as Central Lunatic Asylum for the Colored Insane and located in Richmond, Virginia, the asylum began to admit patients in 1870. This thesis explores three aspects of Central State Hospital\u27s history during the nineteenth century: attitudes physicians held toward their patients, the involuntary commitment of patients, and life inside the asylum. Chapter One explores the nineteenth-century belief held by southern white physicians, including those at Central State Hospital, that freed people were mentally, emotionally, and physically unfit for fre...
The area of my research concerns the treatment of the mentally ill at the Mississippi State Lunatic ...
In this thesis, I argue that U.S. psychiatry’s cultural project in the first half of the twentieth c...
Much has been written about the inequalities inherent in the psychiatric care provided to mentally i...
This dissertation examines the treatment of African Americans with mental disabilities during the ni...
When the State Hospital at Morganton opened its doors in 1883, state leaders called it the “Pearl of...
A Peculiar Institution: Slavery, Labor Relations, and Treatment at Williamsburg, Virginia\u27s Easte...
The treatment and care of the mentally ill in the U.S. has been a topic that has been heavily critic...
Modern psychiatry in the United States emerged at the same time as debate about slavery intensified ...
In the nineteenth century, the perceived ability of alienists (the early term for mental health spec...
textIn "The Politics of Race and Mental Illness" I explore the relationship between conceptualizatio...
The State Hospital for the Insane at Jacksonville, Morgan County, Illinois, was the first public hos...
Mental illness in the United States has been part of a complex history. Many details of mental hospi...
In this dissertation, I analyzing the invagination of slavery and madness as constitutive of the pol...
This dissertation is an overview of the public perception of, discourse concerning, and treatment of...
Weston State Hospital was a major mental institution in Weston, West Virginia. This study traces the...
The area of my research concerns the treatment of the mentally ill at the Mississippi State Lunatic ...
In this thesis, I argue that U.S. psychiatry’s cultural project in the first half of the twentieth c...
Much has been written about the inequalities inherent in the psychiatric care provided to mentally i...
This dissertation examines the treatment of African Americans with mental disabilities during the ni...
When the State Hospital at Morganton opened its doors in 1883, state leaders called it the “Pearl of...
A Peculiar Institution: Slavery, Labor Relations, and Treatment at Williamsburg, Virginia\u27s Easte...
The treatment and care of the mentally ill in the U.S. has been a topic that has been heavily critic...
Modern psychiatry in the United States emerged at the same time as debate about slavery intensified ...
In the nineteenth century, the perceived ability of alienists (the early term for mental health spec...
textIn "The Politics of Race and Mental Illness" I explore the relationship between conceptualizatio...
The State Hospital for the Insane at Jacksonville, Morgan County, Illinois, was the first public hos...
Mental illness in the United States has been part of a complex history. Many details of mental hospi...
In this dissertation, I analyzing the invagination of slavery and madness as constitutive of the pol...
This dissertation is an overview of the public perception of, discourse concerning, and treatment of...
Weston State Hospital was a major mental institution in Weston, West Virginia. This study traces the...
The area of my research concerns the treatment of the mentally ill at the Mississippi State Lunatic ...
In this thesis, I argue that U.S. psychiatry’s cultural project in the first half of the twentieth c...
Much has been written about the inequalities inherent in the psychiatric care provided to mentally i...